Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino was “very persistent” in speaking with the RCMP about their handling of the Freedom Convoy protest in Ottawa after the Emergencies Act was invoked, according to RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki.
“My Minister very persistent,” Lucki said, as quoted in minutes of a Feb. 15 teleconference with the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) and the Ottawa Police Service (OPS), obtained by Blacklock’s Reporter.
“Plan with engagement/reduce the footprint and a lockdown of the city for the weekend. Cannot have more people coming in,” Lucki also said.
The government had invoked the Emergencies Act just one day prior to the teleconference meeting. Lucki attended another teleconference on Feb. 15 with the same police forces, the minutes of which quoted her saying the Freedom Convoy protesters needed to be cleared faster.
“Haven’t seen movement—haven’t seen mission,”she said. “We don’t operate this way. Something needs to change. We have a law stating you cannot join in this. Let’s use it.”
“Reputation of policing is at stake here,” she added.
“Invoking the Emergencies Act did not give the federal government the authority to direct the police services of any jurisdiction,” he said on Feb. 25, adding that “the federal government was very present and supportive of local police” during the protests.
‘Never a Question’ of Requesting Act: Lucki
Both Mendicino and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau later said the government only invoked the Emergencies Act because police officials advised them to do so.“We invoked the act because it was the advice of non-partisan professional law enforcement that existing authorities were ineffective at the time to restore public safety.”
However, Lucki has denied ever asking the government to invoke the act.
Sen. Vernon White asked Lucki if the RCMP ever requested from the “government or representatives for invocation of the Emergencies Act.”
“No, there was never a question of requesting the Emergencies Act,” Lucki replied.