
Sask. police watchdog clears 2 RCMP officers in 2024 Swift Current wellness check death
Saskatchewan's police oversight organization has cleared two RCMP officers in the death of a woman they arrested.
The Saskatchewan Serious Incident Response Team (SIRT) is the provincial civilian-led watchdog agency that investigates incidents involving police.
The new report looks at an incident that happened on May 5, 2024, when a 55-year-old woman died in Swift Current, about 230 kilometres west of Regina.
SIRT says that at about 11:06 a.m. CST, a family member of the 55-year-old asked for a welfare check because the woman was allegedly upset, in pain and couldn't be convinced to go to a hospital.
RCMP were also made aware of the women's history with substance abuse and talk of self-harm.
Two officers then went to the hotel where the woman was staying and reported seeing sores on her feet when speaking with her.
According to SIRT, an officer was able to convince the woman to go to a hospital and an ambulance was called.
At about 11:40 a.m. CST, two paramedics arrived and entered the room, but the woman's level of co-operation changed, per the report.
"While the EMS personnel were able to complete some checks on the affected person, she refused to allow others, became uncooperative, spoke of suicide, and stated that she wished she had died during an earlier incident with EMS," SIRT's report says.
The report says the officer believed he had formed ground to take the woman into custody under the Mental Health Services Act, but told the woman he preferred if she went to the hospital voluntarily.
"When the affected person swatted at the Subject Officer as he attempted to prevent her from lighting a cigarette during the examination, he placed her under arrest pursuant to The Mental Health Services Act."
The woman was arrested without resistance or use of force from the officers, according to the report.
SIRT says the woman kicked backward at an officer and hit them in the shin, but the officer didn't react and didn't use force.
The woman was put on a stretcher and moved into the ambulance while handcuffed.
While on the way to the Cypress Regional Hospital, the 55-year-old said her handcuffs were too tight. When the officer went to adjust the handcuffs, the woman went "limp" and into "medical distress," the report says.
Police removed the handcuffs and paramedics began providing care for the woman.
At about 11:58 a.m. CST, the ambulance arrived at the hospital. The woman was transferred to the care of medical staff and was declared dead by a doctor at about 12:26 p.m. CST.
SIRT concluded that the "arrest was both based on reasonable grounds, and was reasonably conducted" and there were no grounds to believe the RCMP officers committed any offences.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Globe and Mail
3 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Still no evidence that missing Nova Scotia children were kidnapped, RCMP say
After receiving hundreds of tips, analyzing hours of video footage and seizing electronic devices, the Nova Scotia RCMP insist there's still no evidence that two young children who disappeared from the rural hamlet of Lansdowne nearly six weeks ago were kidnapped. The Mounties in a statement Wednesday described their investigation into the mysterious case as tenacious and intensive. They said they were getting help from the RCMP-run National Centre for Missing Persons and Unidentified Remains, as well as provincial and municipal police agencies from Nova Scotia and other parts of Canada. But despite suggestions from the children's stepfather that someone may have abducted them, police have found nothing to suggest six-year-old Lilly and four-year-old Jack Sullivan were taken from their home. 'There is no evidence the children were abducted, however, investigators are exploring all possibilities,' RCMP spokesperson Cindy Bayers said during an interview Wednesday. The RCMP said in their latest statement that more than 11 units of the national police force are engaged in the investigation and that they're using every in-house tool and resource, including digital forensics, truth verification and behavioral sciences units, legal support and forensic analysis. A national charity, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, has also been offering support to the children's families and their school. So far, police have been granted seven judicial authorizations to seize devices and materials that they believe may help their investigation, and more applications are expected, Ms. Bayers said. She declined to specify what the devices or the materials are. She added there have been no confirmed or substantiated sightings of the children since they were reported missing around 10 a.m. on May 2. Two Nova Scotia children are missing. Here's a timeline of key events since the siblings vanished The children were last seen in public on May 1, getting groceries with their stepfather, Daniel Martell, in the nearby town of New Glasgow. Mr. Martell has said he and the family spent the evening at the mobile home while he worked on the fence at the back of the property. His mother, who owns the mobile home, resides on the property in a camper. The next morning, the children's mother, Malehya Brooks-Murray, marked the children absent from school at 6:17 a.m., Mr. Martell said. Roughly four hours later, Ms. Brooks-Murray called 911 and reported Lilly and Jack missing. Both she and Mr. Martell have said they were dozing in bed and awoke to find the children gone. They assumed the kids put on their boots, went out the back door and escaped the wood and chicken wire fence that surrounds the back yard of the home, he told The Globe and Mail. Ms. Brooks-Murray left the home the following day with the couple's one-year-old daughter, cut off contact with Mr. Martell and later changed her Facebook status to single. Search and rescue teams pored over the area for six days, traversing thick woods, brush, swamps and steep terrain, returning twice more to search areas that major crime investigators had identified as worth re-examining. Police say they've extensively searched inside the family's mobile home, the property and outbuildings as well as nearby septic systems, wells and culverts. Four mineshafts in the Lansdowne Station area have also been searched, Ms. Bayers said Wednesday. 'We're working to identify and locate any others,' she added. Lansdowne Station is a historical copper mining area with a labyrinth of old shafts and tunnels. In 2002, the body of a man who had been missing for 19 years was discovered by amateur mineral explorers inside an old copper mine, located on private property in the area, according to a local news story. The remains of 39-year-old Alex Penney, extracted by a team of RCMP officers, were later identified through DNA analysis and remains an unsolved homicide. In the case of Lilly and Jack Sullivan, the Mounties said they had collected hundreds of hours of video from home and business security cameras in the areas surrounding Lansdowne Station. Police say they've received 488 tips, and formally interviewed 54 people, some of whom took polygraph tests. Mr. Martell has said he volunteered to do one recently and that his results were favourable. He recently told The Globe that he's been interviewed by a homicide detective, providing as many details as possible, and suggested other people he believes police should interview. 'I just continue to do media and get the word out for the kids, keep it alive and keep it relevant so we can get as many tips as possible,' he said in late May. Cpl. Sandy Matharu, who is leading the investigation for the Northeast Nova RCMP Major Crime Unit, said in a statement Wednesday that police are accessing, evaluating and analyzing a 'significant volume of information from a variety of sources.' The statement adds: 'We're committed to doing what is necessary to locate Lilly and Jack and advance the investigation, which may take longer than we all hoped.'


CTV News
5 hours ago
- CTV News
Police investigating shooting near Surrey community centre
Heavily armed police officers were among the first responders who converged on the scene of a shooting in Surrey's Fleetwood neighbourhood Wednesday afternoon. (CTV News) Heavily armed police officers were among the first responders who converged on the scene of a shooting in Surrey's Fleetwood neighbourhood Wednesday afternoon. Images from the scene on 84 Avenue near 160 Street show police and paramedics gathered outside a commercial building. Some of the officers appear to be part of the Lower Mainland Integrated Emergency Response Team. The site is across the street from Fleetwood Community Centre. The Surrey Police Service told CTV News in an email that officers from the RCMP Surrey Provincial Operations Support Unit were on scene investigating a shooting. The SPS did not provide any additional information – such as whether anyone had been killed or injured or whether any suspects had been identified or arrested – but said a news release would be issued later on Wednesday. This is a developing story. Check back for updates


CTV News
5 hours ago
- CTV News
RCMP investigating suspicious death near Grand Coulee, Sask.
An RCMP detachment can be seen in this file photo. (David Prisciak/CTV News) RCMP are investigating after the body of a Regina man was discovered in a rural area near Grand Coulee, Sask. According to police, the body was discovered around 7:25 a.m. on June 10. White Butte RCMP responded and secured the scene soon after. Saskatchewan RCMP Major Crimes are currently investigating the death, which is considered suspicious at this time. The deceased has been identified as 35-year-old Aron Lunan of Regina. His family has been notified. Lunan was last seen in Regina's North Central neighbourhood. Police are asking for anyone who saw or had contact with Lunan between the afternoon of Monday, June 9 and morning of Tuesday, June 10 to contact RCMP or submit an anonymous tip to Saskatchewan Crime Stoppers. Lunan is described as five foot, three inches tall with a slim build and brown hair. He was last wearing a black hoodie with skulls and grey flames on it, along with black sweatpants with a praying hand design on them and a green jacket with a white sticker on the upper left side of the chest. He was also known to ride a bike – which is described as an all black Supercycle bike. The front tire forks on the bike are painted white and the word 'fox' is handwritten on the front shock absorber. RCMP have not located the bike at this time. Grand Coulee is located approximately 12 kilometres west of Regina.