medicineman
Army.ca Legend
- Reaction score
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- Points
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Hamish Seggie said:I bet he had an obsession with weapons and ammunition.
Sounds a lot like his main obsession was himself...
MM
Hamish Seggie said:I bet he had an obsession with weapons and ammunition.
'Creative Biolabs has successfully developed SARS, MERS and other anti-viral antibodies in the past to assist scientific research. Facing the difficult COVID-19, Creative Biolabs actively invests in antibody development to assist researchers to better understand the characteristics of 2019-nCoV and drug development.'
Baz said:
There will be an online tribute to the victims this evening. Details can be found at https://heartcolchester.ca/. The site also contains links to many of the active relief funds for the families.
Quirky said:If you google 28B11 - the serial number he used on his fake cop car - the first result takes you to this page -
https://www.creativebiolabs.net/anti-il17f-antibody-scfv-fragment-123924.htm
Probably a hoax right? Creative bio-labs has been around since 2005 and that website has been up since 2015. Why he used that number who knows, but that would be a pretty big coincidence.
Quirky said:If you google 28B11 - the serial number he used on his fake cop car - the first result takes you to this page -
https://www.creativebiolabs.net/anti-il17f-antibody-scfv-fragment-123924.htm
Probably a hoax right? Creative bio-labs has been around since 2005 and that website has been up since 2015. Why he used that number who knows, but that would be a pretty big coincidence.
CloudCover said:You don't get "sent" on the musical ride, you apply for it. Press liaison is an internal position posted if a member interested and if they have the skills, they can apply for internally. Not sure about community officers, but in any event none of these take away from the fact she met the shooter head on, put herself in that position when she could have made another choice, and she did that because it was her job.
I really hope this incident does not become about the shortcomings of the RCMP, and instead it remains focused on preventing domestic violence, eliminating the seeds of murder rage, and maybe, just maybe, an initial discussion about how maybe some of those people could have lived if they had an opportunity to defend themselves and were encouraged by our laws to do so, rather than discouraged.
Humphrey Bogart said:How is it that in a moment of crisis like this, The RCMP ERT members are at a gas station gassing up their trucks? Do they not keep them filled as standard policy?
dapaterson said:Given that the incident had begun hours before, it's entirely reasonable that the team would need to refuel, preferably before they reach a critical fuel level.
Humphrey Bogart said:That would make sense. I'm more interested in ERT response times then anything. My reasoning is if we are spending all this money for highly trained operators, we better be able to put them on scene quickly.
I'm not sure if that's the case though at least it doesn't seem like it. It was the same when I was in the Northern Communities, response time was mentioned to me as many many hours in some cases.
I don't think that's acceptable to the communities or the frontline police tasked with enforcing the law in those areas.
Humphrey Bogart said:That would make sense. I'm more interested in ERT response times then anything. My reasoning is if we are spending all this money for highly trained operators, we better be able to put them on scene quickly.
I'm not sure if that's the case though at least it doesn't seem like it. It was the same when I was in the Northern Communities, response time was mentioned to me as many many hours in some cases.
I don't think that's acceptable to the communities or the frontline police tasked with enforcing the law in those areas.
MilEME09 said:Once the investigation into the shooting is complete a inquiry of some kind is likely going to happen, at which time the RCMP will be under the microscope on all aspects. The results of which might end up being a hard pill for the RCMP to swallow but lead to changes in the force and how it operates. Not to prevent mass shootings, but to improve response so that it doesn't get as bad as this got.
dapaterson said:Covering major urban areas is easy; covering vast, largely but not entirely uninhabited areas is not.
dapaterson said:The challenge in any service delivery in Canada is geography, and lack of population density. Covering major urban areas is easy; covering vast, largely but not entirely uninhabited areas is not. Look at SAR coverage and response times for a comparable problem space.
Humphrey Bogart said:Absolutely but this is really my point.
The RCMP seems very poorly equipped for the remote territories they have to patrol. The fact they have only just started equipping their Police with carbines is a problem.
Their Air Wing seems completely inadequate for the type of Operations they are required for in that their helicopters and aircraft have neither the speed, capacity or range to carry out high-risk police operations.
Compare RCMP ERT teams with an organization like GIGN and compare their aviation fleet with the French Gendarmerie or the German Bundespolizei.
France's Gendarmerie has 55 helicopters while the German Federal Police have 84 helicopters including 22 Super Pumas (i.e. heavy lift)
The RCMP has a measly 8 helicopters and a few light aircraft. It should be noted that Canada is 18 times larger than France and 28 times larger than Germany geographically.
GIGN has 4 platoons of operators with two on permanent alert. The platoons are also trained in HALO/HAHO parachuting and are based right beside a French airbase where they have dedicated access to Heavy Fixed and Rotary aviation.
It's quite clear to me that the RCMP air fleet is completely inadequate for what we expect the RCMP to do and it also seems like the ERT teams themselves are poorly optimized for response to incidents like this which is essentially a terrorist incident. I'm beginning to wonder if the Feds need to consider bringing back SERT and making some significant investments in Police Aviation.
Humphrey Bogart said:Absolutely but this is really my point.
The RCMP seems very poorly equipped for the remote territories they have to patrol. The fact they have only just started equipping their Police with carbines is a problem.
Their Air Wing seems completely inadequate for the type of Operations they are required for in that their helicopters and aircraft have neither the speed, capacity or range to carry out high-risk police operations.
Compare RCMP ERT teams with an organization like GIGN and compare their aviation fleet with the French Gendarmerie or the German Bundespolizei.
France's Gendarmerie has 55 helicopters while the German Federal Police have 84 helicopters including 22 Super Pumas (i.e. heavy lift)
The RCMP has a measly 8 helicopters and a few light aircraft. It should be noted that Canada is 18 times larger than France and 28 times larger than Germany geographically.
GIGN has 4 platoons of operators with two on permanent alert. The platoons are also trained in HALO/HAHO parachuting and are based right beside a French airbase where they have dedicated access to Heavy Fixed and Rotary aviation.
It's quite clear to me that the RCMP air fleet is completely inadequate for what we expect the RCMP to do and it also seems like the ERT teams themselves are poorly optimized for response to incidents like this which is essentially a terrorist incident. I'm beginning to wonder if the Feds need to consider bringing back SERT and making some significant investments in Police Aviation.