mariomike said:Or, maybe Garda. This took place recently on the Danforth.
Off-duty guard grabbing food kills 2 at McDonald's
http://www.torontosun.com/2015/02/28/2-killed-at-east-end-mcdonalds
tomahawk6 said:Task the RCMP to mount guard.
tomahawk6 said:Task the RCMP to mount guard.
Colin P said:You could train reg and reserve MP to guard them, that way you increase capacity in the military rather than handing money over to the police. Now if the police get the money from another budget, then fine.
Colin P said:You could train reg and reserve MP to guard them, that way you increase capacity in the military rather than handing money over to the police. Now if the police get the money from another budget, then fine.
Jed said:I agree with your observations on how things transpire around the Cenotaph. I make my comments so they will plant the seeds that there are other more economical and expedient ways of providing personal protection for our troops than:
a. Full LEO visible presence;
b. Troops with full Battle Rattle;
c. Expensive Overwatch by LEO or CAF assets; and
d. Nothing new here, puff your chest out and put on your mean face.
The magic of federalism: it seems that it's almost always about who's grass is being cut by whom, isn't it?mariomike said:Sounds liketurfjurisdiction may be involved.
mariomike said:Sounds liketurfjurisdiction may be involved.
"As for why DND wouldn’t use military police to guard the sentries, Ottawa Police say it’s because of jurisdiction and protocols within the military."
http://www.923jackfm.com/2015/03/12/ottawa-police-offices-may-guard-the-sentries-at-the-national-war-memorial/
milnews.ca said:The magic of federalism: it seems that it's almost always about who's grass is being cut by whom, isn't it?
Jarnhamar said:I remember reading somewhere a reservist who is off duty (ie not signed in) but on DND property including a bystander in the presence of a DND function such as a parade is subject to the NDA. If that's true it seems weird they would fall under the NDA but a military police officer wouldn't have jurisdiction.
60. (1) The following persons are subject to the Code of Service Discipline:
(c) an officer or non-commissioned member of the reserve force when the officer or non-commissioned member is
(i) undergoing drill or training, whether in uniform or not,
(ii) in uniform,
(iii) on duty,
(iv) [Repealed, 1998, c. 35, s. 19]
(v) called out under Part VI in aid of the civil power,
(vi) called out on service,
(vii) placed on active service,
(viii) in or on any vessel, vehicle or aircraft of the Canadian Forces or in or on any defence establishment or work for defence,
(ix) serving with any unit or other element of the regular force or the special force, or
(x) present, whether in uniform or not, at any drill or training of a unit or other element of the Canadian Forces;
When am I subject to the CSD?
If you are a member of the Regular Force you are always subject to the CSD, both inside and outside Canada. If you are a member of the Reserve Force, you are subject to the CSD:
•while undergoing drill or training (whether you are in uniform or not)
•whenever you are in uniform
•while on any military duty
•24 hours a day, 7 days a week during any period of full time service (Class "B" or "C" service)
•whenever you are present on defence property
•whenever you are in a vehicle, ship or aircraft of the CF.
An MOU would rectify that would it not if agreed upon should the GoC decide to change tack?Schindler's Lift said:Yes, that is exactly what it is. Policing wise it's Ottawa police jurisdiction, plain and simple. Even for such functions as Remembrance Day, while there is a limited MP presence, its only because they are paired with Ottawa PD and/or RCMP, at the request of those departments, to augment their own pers. The protocols within the Military that the article speaks of is that essentially, given the jurisdiction issues, it's not a job for the MPs. Ultimately it's the government that determines the course of action and it is not their will to have CAF pers providing armed security services like this in Canada.
Jarnhamar said:I remember reading somewhere a reservist who is off duty (ie not signed in) but on DND property including a bystander in the presence of a DND function such as a parade is subject to the NDA. If that's true it seems weird they would fall under the NDA but a military police officer wouldn't have jurisdiction.
Didn't some kind of new MP head quarters or command group spring into existence? Tasking MPs with this duty seems like a perfect solution. I'm sure it's cheaper tasking MPs to do this job than paying cops over time to do it.
jollyjacktar said:An MOU would rectify that would it not if agreed upon should the GoC decide to change tack?
Blackadder1916 said:Everybody (military, civilian, citizen, non-citizen, tourist, illegal . . . well, perhaps excluding accredited foreign diplomatic representatives) are subject to the National Defence Act just like any other piece of Canadian legislation. Whether it has any bearing on them is another matter. What you may be semi-remembering are the circumstances when reservists are subject to the "Code of Service Discipline", which is only a part of the NDA.
Schindler's Lift said:I really don't see where it says that "everyone" is subject to the NDA. The section clearly outlines the conditions whereby reserve force members are subject to the CSD. The only time civilians are subject to the Code is when they are formally accompanying the CAF on an overseas deployment. For example an RCMP member in or even the PSP pers in KAF were subject to the NDA while some Canadian citizen who is employed by KBR would not be.