Politics

Federal government 'lost confidence' in Ottawa police, Lucki told OPP in texts released at convoy inquiry

A text message from RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki says the federal government was already losing confidence in the Ottawa police just one week into a massive protest which turned into an occupation in downtown Ottawa and at several border crossings last winter.

Lucki told OPP commissioner that federal ministers were upset with how the convoy was being handled

RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki sent texts to the OPP telling them that after a week of protests in Ottawa the federal government had lost confidence in the Ottawa Police Service. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

A text message from RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki says the federal government was already losing confidence in the Ottawa police just one week into a massive protest which turned into an occupation in downtown Ottawa and at several border crossings last winter.

The message was part of a string of texts between Lucki and Ontario Provincial Police Commissioner Thomas Carrique on Feb. 5. They were entered into evidence at the Public Order Emergencies Commission Thursday, while Carrique was on the witness stand.

The commission was established to determine if the federal government was justified in its decision to invoke the Emergencies Act for the first time in Canadian history. The government argues its temporary and extraordinary powers were needed to end the blockades.

The text messages between Carrique and Lucki on Feb. 5 — in which the RCMP commissioner also said she was having a hard time trying to calm down federal cabinet ministers who were seeing "bouncing castles in downtown Ottawa" — were submitted to the public inquiry.

The protest began Jan. 29 and the act was invoked on Feb. 14. But by Feb. 5, Lucki was telling Carrique the federal cabinet was already highly concerned.

RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki's texts are shown in blue. OPP Commissioner Thomas Carrique's texts are shown in green. (POEC)
RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki's texts are shown in blue. OPP Commissioner Thomas Carrique's texts are shown in green. (POEC)

"Between you and I only, (Government of Canada) is losing (or) lost confidence in OPS, we gotta get to safe action (or)
enforcement," Lucki texted Carrique.

"'Cause if they go the Emergency Measures Act, you or (I) may be brought into lead, not something I want."

Lucki then said she was on a call with cabinet ministers, although she did not name them.

"Trying to calm them down," she wrote. "Not easy when they see cranes, structures, horses, bouncing castles in downtown Ottawa. Any suggesting for calming them?"

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino, Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are among the eight federal cabinet ministers who will testify at the inquiry later.

Protesters' demands 'could not be realized,' head of OPP says

In his testimony, Carrique said the OPP knew about the "Freedom Convoy" about two weeks before it arrived in Ottawa and that OPP intelligence knew they were planning to be there for a long time.

Carrique said it was clear the protesters were making "demands that could not be realized in the short term, or at all."

He also said he thought Ottawa police would not let large trucks into the city's downtown, and that had he known otherwise he would have asked more questions and could have offered extra resources.

A summary of an interview Carrique did with commission lawyers before the public hearings began shows the OPP boss didn't think it was wise for Ottawa police or city officials to publicly call for 1,800 more officers to deal with the protests, because it showed demonstrators they were overwhelmed.

As hundreds of trucks and other vehicles turned much of downtown Ottawa into a parking lot and ongoing protest party, many more took up spots at border crossings in Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and British Columbia.

Carrique said that was no accident and the situations could not be dealt with in isolation.

"Make no mistake about it," he said. "It was by intent and design.

"It is not circumstance that we had an occupation in the city of Ottawa, and we had blockage at the Ambassador Bridge at the exact same time. That was intentionally designed to challenge the capacity of our police."

Carrique testified clearing protesters from the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor, Ont., was an "operational priority" in part because of the economic losses caused by traffic being blocked at the border.

The bridge reopened on Feb. 13 after RCMP and other police used a court injunction to force protesters away.

Carrique testified clearing the blockade around Parliament Hill might have happened sooner had police not needed to manage convoy protests at the Ambassador Bridge and other locations, and that police in Ottawa had a plan in place to clear protesters — which didn't happen until Feb. 13.

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