I was aware of the information that Staff Sergeant Lewis had provided in his package of materials. I was aware of the concern that he, and apparently others, had in relation to some of the internal workings of the force. In fact, my deputy minister responded to Staff Sergeant Lewis, and I would like to read some of that, if I could, into the record.
On May 18, 2005, an e-mail was sent to Staff Sergeant Lewis in response to some of the concerns he raised. I would point out that Margaret Bloodworth, then deputy minister, acknowledges the fact that: “You have expressed confidence”—“you” being Staff Sergeant Lewis—“in the criminal investigation process”.
She then went on to write the following: “With respect to your comments regarding internal investigations, for any RCMP code of conduct violations, these are not matters in which either the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Canada, the minister, or the deputy minister become involved. Therefore, I am unable to provide you with any information on this issue.”
She went on to say—and I think this is important--“Should you have concerns regarding any aspect of the code of conduct process, you may lodge a complaint with the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP. As you may know, the CPC is a civilian agency created by Parliament in 1986 to ensure that public complaints”--and complaints can be laid by a member of the force against a superior officer, and that, I believe, was determined by the department in terms of the jurisdiction of the CPC--“regarding the conduct of RCMP members are examined impartially and thoroughly.”
She went on to provide Staff Sergeant Lewis with the contact information—address, e-mail, and telephone number—for the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP, if he wished to pursue his concerns with the commissioner, or any other of his colleagues, wherever they were in the hierarchy of the RCMP.