Police finish review of high number of 'unfounded' P.E.I. sex assault cases - Action News
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PEICBC Investigates

Police finish review of high number of 'unfounded' P.E.I. sex assault cases

Reviews of sexual assault complaints labelled unfounded by two police forces reach different conclusions.

'Unfounded' label expresses disbelief, sends wrong message says Status of Women

All police services on P.E.I. have finished their reviews of sexual assault files labelled as unfounded. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

Reviews by P.E.I.'s two city police departments have reached different conclusions about how they track the outcomes ofsexual assault investigations.

Charlottetown andSummersidecompleted the reviews, along with theKensingtonforce and theRCMP, this springafter a report in The Globe and Mail found 19 per cent of sex assault cases in Canada between 2010 and 2014 were deemed unfounded. P.E.I.'s rate, which only included data provided by the RCMP and Summersidepolice,was even higher 27 per cent.

After completing itsreview,Summerside has cut the number of cases labelled unfounded in half dropping from 19 percent to nine percent.However Charlottetown's review has confirmed its 50 per cent rate.

The lack of a clear definitionof what should belabelledunfoundedhas led to different interpretations from force to force across the country, including here in P.E.I.

Summersidereview finds half filesmislabelled

SummersidePolice Services determinedhalf the cases labelled unfoundedshouldhave been considered unsolvedinstead.

Just because somebody chooses not to talk about it ... you still can't say that it didn't happen.- Sgt. Ron MacLean

Unfounded cases should be reserved for files where, "we're saying that without a doubt it never happened,"said Sgt. RonMacLean, withSummerside's major crime section.

He reviewed 28 sexual assault files from 2010 to 2016 that were originally labelledas unfounded, and determined only 14 should have been in that category. Summerside had a total of 149 sexual assault investigations over that time period.

"There was no problem with the actual investigation, it was how they were cleared in the end," said MacLean.

Cases he reclassified as unsolved included those where there wasn't enough evidence to lay a charge. Typically, said MacLean, these were historic incidents with no physical evidence and no other witnesses.

Sgt. Ron MacLean reviewed all the sexual assault investigations that were cleared as unfounded in Summerside between 2010 and 2016. (CBC News)

"Other than the allegation made by a victim, and the accused saying it didn't happen, you just have one person's word against another."

Others, he said, that should have been labelled unsolvedinvolvedvictims who decided they didn't want to talk about it.

"It's their right and we respect that," he said, adding, "just because somebody chooses not to talk about it, which like I said is their right, you still can't say that it didn't happen."

Charlottetown reaches different conclusion

Charlottetown Police Services came to a different conclusion.Of its 107 sexual assault investigations between 2014 and 2016, half 54 were categorized as unfounded, and the review has confirmed they were all labelled correctly, said GaryMcGuigan, Charlottetown's deputy police chief.

"Any sexual assault file that was labelled unfounded, we looked at it, we reviewed it and we're quite confident that the integrity of the file will stand up," he said.

Charlottetown's Deputy Police Chief Gary McGuigan says he's confident all sexual assault complaints deemed 'unfounded' were handled and labelled appropriately. (Sally Pitt/CBC News)

Like Summerside,Charlottetown included those cases where there wasn't enough evidence to support a charge, and those where the victim refused to talk. However, while Summerside will now call these unsolved, Charlottetown's deputy chief says investigators will continue to label them unfounded.

"There's noother wayto score these files. We are at the mercy of a records management system that will only allow us to score them as unfounded," said McGuigan.

He stressedthat unfoundedis a category used for record management and doesn't mean those who laid complaints were not believed.
The executive director of the P.E.I. Advisory Council on the Status of Women worries a high number of 'unfounded' sexual assaults sends the wrong message. (Sally Pitt/CBC News)
These allegations are treated seriously and taken seriously.- Deputy Chief Gary McGuigan

McGuigansaidhis force encourages anyone who is a victim of a crime to report it to police.

"We're asking and encouraging them to come forward. These allegations are treated seriously and taken seriously."

"We work with victims of crime and the Crown attorneys' office to ensure the integrity of these files and that justice is done," said McGuigan.

Unfounded label 'expresses disbelief'

Those findings are a concern for theP.E.I. Advisory Council on the Status of Women.When police label a high number of sexual assault investigations as unfoundedit sends the wrong message to the community, according to JaneLedwell, executive director of the council.

She says it suggeststhat victims are not believed, and that a high number of accusations are false.

"Words are meaningful and labelling something 'unfounded' means that it has no foundation," saidLedwell.

"It means it's baseless and it expresses disbelief about the victim's story."

The P.E.I. government has the results of all fourreviews and plans to work with police in the province to come up with consistent reporting in the future.

Ledwellsaidthose who report crimes, particularly violent sexual crimes, need to feel they are believed.

"I would encourage the Department of Justice and Public Safety and the police services on P.E.I. to come up with really good definitions, really consistent and clear definitions of how they investigate and what they have to do to label a case," she said.

'Consistent reporting into the future'

The reviews by allfour police forces on P.E.I. RCMP and Charlottetown, Summerside and Kensington police forces are in the hands of P.E.I.'s Department of Justice and Public Safety.

'We're open to anything that needs to be done or has to be done."- Deputy Chief Gary McGuigan

In a statement, the department saidsenior staff have discussed the reviews and that a meeting is planned with police, victim services and the Crown, "with a focus on consistent reporting into the future."

The department said the results will be made public, although it does not have a timeline for that.

Gary McGuigan says his department is open to any changes that might be recommended.

"Anything we can do in terms of assisting victims or helping victims, we're open to anything that needs to be done or has to be done."

Police chiefs recommend clear definitions

Changes are in the works at a national level too. The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police in a statement issued April 26 recommended that all police services adopt a more "victim-centredmanner one that correctly conveys our belief in the victim regardless of whether or not the incident can be substantiated through the investigative process," said directorMario Harel.

The associationsuggested clear definitions be developed, and that the unfounded category be reserved for cases where police are convincedno crime occurred.

Summerside's MacLean welcomes clearer definitions for forces across the country. For his force, the sergeant in charge of major crime, a role he holds,will review all the sexual assault investigations from now on to make sure they're labelled consistently.

"I want to make sure that my service, we're doing the best quality investigation that we can," saidMacLean.

TheRCMPon P.E.I. have turned their results over to national headquarters, which plans to release its findings once all detachments have submitted their reports.

Statistics Canada announced in late April that it would once again start tracking unfounded sex assault cases. Itstopped doing soin 2003over concerns the files were not being coded consistently.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story calculated the percentage of unfounded cases for Summerside incorrectly. Those numbers have now been adjusted.
    Jun 12, 2017 2:54 PM AT