Murphy’s Logic: The mass shooting inquiry should put facts over feelings
Murphy’s Logic: The mass shooting inquiry should put facts over feelings
It took almost five years, but the public inquiry into the Westray Mine disaster ultimately produced a report that was both damning and specific about the many failures that led to the explosion that claimed 26 lives.
It named names and assigned responsibility and recommended changes to prevent it from happening again. Although no one was ever convicted of a crime, Justice Peter Richard left no doubt that the conduct of individuals and institutions -- characterized as incompetent, deceitful, and apathetic -- led to a preventable disaster.
And, he went further, finding it ought to have been prevented.
These many years later, the commission investigating the 2020 Nova Scotia mass murder seems well on track to producing a report unlikely to answer the public's most basic questions: How did it happen and why? Who in the RCMP was making decisions during and after the killing spree and could it have been prevented?
The commission's overarching mandate -- to be trauma-focused -- suggests protecting feelings may pre-empt facts.
From the very beginning, the RCMP have been defensive and secretive about their handling of the events of April 2020. The initial focus of the RCMP’s briefings was on their own lost and injured members and on what were characterized as the heroic efforts of the responding officers.
But, in fairness, this was no triumph of policing, as a killer kept killing, while the public remained largely unaware of the threat.
It is not a sign of disrespect to analyze and question the actions of people who often heroically wear a uniform of service. The uniform is not a shield from accountability. And while it is true that feelings must be respected as words are parsed and actions are critically reviewed, there can be no escaping responsibility for those who are empowered and entrusted to protect the public.
Assigning responsibility is not a vengeful laying of blame.
In the case of the events of April 2020, many serious mistakes were made. One would think or hope that the leadership of the RCMP, and the people to whom they report, would be first among those who would want to know what went wrong -- if they don't actually know already.
Beyond insulting the memories of the dead and further bruising the emotions of their family members, the misguided attempt to have feelings trump facts has provided oxygen to the already burning fire of suspicion of coverup.
The lack of information from the very beginning, the emphasis on the mass murder as a police shooting, rather than wholesale community carnage, was the kindling that stoked the fire of suspicion.
Although the commission’s hearings have produced a slow drip of new information, most of it should have been made public long ago and might have been were it not for the ease with which privacy is now used to perpetuate secrecy.
Without even waiting to read the commission’s report, it seems likely to be dismissed by some, and perhaps many, as a whitewash -- a part of a coverup.
And regrettably, it has already taken quite a very long time to accomplish very little.
It is not too late for the commissioners to look to the example of the Westray inquiry, to assign responsibility and put the facts first.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
U.S. Capitol riot: More people turn up with evidence against Donald Trump
More witnesses are coming forward with new details on the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot following former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson's devastating testimony last week against former U.S. President Donald Trump, says a member of a U.S. House committee investigating the insurrection.

'He was a hero': Family says Ottawa man killed in fatal collision sacrificed himself
The family of an Ottawa man killed in a Canada Day crash in the west end says Tom Bergeron died exactly as he lived: selflessly thinking of others before himself.
Dog left with lost baggage at Toronto Pearson Airport for about 21 hours
A Toronto woman says a dog she rescued from the Dominican Republic has been traumatized after being left in a corner of Toronto Pearson International Airport with baggage for about 21 hours.
Chinese-Canadian tycoon due to stand trial in China, embassy says
Chinese-Canadian billionaire Xiao Jianhua, who went missing in Hong Kong five years ago, was due to go on trial in China on Monday, the Canadian embassy in Beijing said.
'Hell on earth': Ukrainian soldiers describe life on eastern front
Torched forests and cities burned to the ground. Colleagues with severed limbs. Bombardments so relentless the only option is to lie in a trench, wait and pray. Ukrainian soldiers returning from the front lines in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region, where Russia is waging a fierce offensive, describe life during what has turned into a gruelling war of attrition as apocalyptic.
Video shows police in Ohio kill Black man in hail of gunfire
A Black man was unarmed when Akron police chased him on foot and killed him in a hail of gunfire, but officers believed he had shot at them earlier from a vehicle and feared he was preparing to fire again, authorities said Sunday at a news conference.
N.S. woman calls for private fireworks regulation after her dog dies 'scared and alone'
Canada Day weekend fireworks have sparked more calls to either regulate or ban backyard fireworks displays in Nova Scotia.
Shooting at Williams Lake, B.C. stampede injures 2, forces evacuation
Two people are injured and a third is in custody after what RCMP describe as a 'public shooting' at a rodeo in B.C. Sunday.
Dutch farmers block entrances to supermarket warehouses
Dutch farmers angry at government plans to slash emissions used tractors and trucks Monday to block roads and supermarket distribution centers, sparking fears of store food shortages in the latest actions through a summer of discontent in the country's lucrative agricultural sector.