Mistreatment claim leads to investigation of Regina police

Regina police carThe mother of a 25-year-old woman posted on Facebook that her daughter was traumatized by Regina police

CBC News, Jan 05, 2015

Regina Police have requested an investigation by the Public Complaints Commission after accusations they mistreated a 25-year-old woman surfaced on social media.

In a Facebook post Sunday evening, the mother of the woman accused Regina police of “traumatizing” her daughter. 

“My daughter begged for her life and then they threw her in jail cells. My daughter was missing. I didn’t know where she was,” the post said in part.

She said she looked all day for her daughter and called the police, but claims they did not give her any information. A half hour later, she said her daughter called from the Regina police cells and said she had been released with no charges.

In the post she said her daughter was traumatized and crying over the event.

In a release Monday afternoon, police confirmed they did pick up a 25-year-old woman and 16-year-old girl in the early morning hours of Jan. 4, 2015.

According to police, they were called to the 3500 block of Avonhurst Drive just before 5 a.m. CST, where they found the two women they say were extremely intoxicated.

Police said when they arrived one woman was banging on a door of an apartment, while the other was semi-conscious in front of the building.

The women were checked out by paramedics, who took the 16-year-old to the hospital, police said.

According to the officers, the 25-year-old was not able to provide them with a place she could go, so she was arrested for public intoxication and taken to the RPS cells.

Video of the detention area was reviewed and it shows the woman came into the police building without a jacket or footwear, said police, who added the entire event is documented in the officers’ reports and radio communications.

That information, along with the GPS data from the vehicle and the video recording from the detention area has been sent to the Public Complaints Commission.

In the afternoon release, police stressed that officers are unable to disable the GPS equipment in their vehicles and cannot opt out of radio contact without explanation.

Police said privacy provisions do not allow them to release information about anyone in their cells to the public, even if the person identifies themselves as family.

The Regina Police Service is speaking to the media this afternoon.

More to come.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/mistreatment-claim-leads-to-investigation-of-regina-police-1.2890483

Posted on January 5, 2015, in State Security Forces and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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