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Team leader denounces RCMP’s lack of mental-health support after N.S. shooting

KEITH DOUCETTE HALIFAX

The RCMP’s treatment of their tactical team in the days after the April, 2020, mass shooting in Nova Scotia was characterized as “absolutely disgusting” Monday during testimony before the public inquiry examining the killings.

Retired corporal Tim Mills, who headed the 13-member Emergency Response Team, told the inquiry that a lack of mentalhealth support in the week after the rampage that claimed 22 lives is the main reason he left the force after a 29-year career.

“The RCMP as an organization wants to give this impression that they care about their members,” Mr. Mills testified. “The way that we were treated after [Portapique] was disgusting, absolutely disgusting.”

Mr. Mills detailed his attempts to get more time for his eight part-time team members to “decompress” after the April 18-19, 2020, rampage instead of quickly returning to general duties at their detachments after the unit was stood down for three days.

He said it was agreed during a debriefing involving team members and three psychiatrists on April 24 that a request would be made for the part-timers to work at headquarters with the fulltime team members for a period of two weeks.

“Their advice was to be around like-minded people, talk openly about it, stay busy,” Mr. Mills said.

But, he said the request appeared to go nowhere, and by April 29 he was told the parttime team members had to return to their home units.

“There are members off because of Portapique that are still off today, that didn’t see what we saw. They forced our guys back to work a week and a half after.”

Mr. Mills said he pushed to find out who had made the decision, but it all became too much for him by November, 2020. “At that point I was like, ‘I’m done working for a broken organization,’ ” he said. Mr. Mills retired from the RCMP in July, 2021.

Meanwhile, Mr. Mills and the team’s second-in-command the night of the shootings, Corporal Trent Milton, gave testimony Monday related to an inquiry document detailing the team’s initial response to the shootings.

Mr. Mills said he was first notified of the continuing situation around 10:45 p.m. on April 18, 2020. The first members of his team arrived outside Portapique just under two hours later.

Cpl. Milton was the first one there and he said he decided to wait for Mr. Mills and the team’s tactical assault vehicle about 10 minutes behind.

“At that time, based on the information and facts that we had, it was what I’ll call a non-active threat. There was no active gunfire and the location of the perpetrator was unknown,” Cpl. Milton testified, adding that other Mounties were already at the scene.

Soon after its arrival, the team was about to enter Portapique when it was sent to check out several suspicious sightings involving someone with a flashlight outside homes in the community of Five Houses, across a river and nearly three kilometres away.

But they did not have operational tracking and digital mapping devices in their vehicles, while technology that was on their phones and would have allowed team members to locate one another wasn’t working. As a result, they relied on verbal radio directions from commanders to navigate their way.

At one point, the document notes that Mr. Mills had difficulty finding the location of the reported sightings using the instructions he was given over the radio, which also had too many members on it at the time.

He soon asked Staff Sergeant Brian Rehill, who was the risk manager at the RCMP’s Operational Communications Centre in Truro, N.S., to call his cellphone to sort things out.

“If you listen to the radio comms at all, total confusion on that geographical area,” Mr. Mills testified.

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2022-05-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-05-17T07:00:00.0000000Z

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