Alberta government threatens to dissolve Lethbridge police force unless chief shows reform plan in weeks - Action News
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Alberta government threatens to dissolve Lethbridge police force unless chief shows reform plan in weeks

Alberta's justice minister has given the police chief in Lethbridge, Alta., a three-week deadline to produce a plan to shape up the force, saying if not, it'll be dissolved under an "extraordinary" step by the government, according to letters exclusively obtained by CBC News.

The force has been the subject of recent scandals, several of which involve NDP MLA Shannon Phillips

Alberta Justice Minister Kaycee Madu, left, gave a three-week deadline to Lethbridge Police Chief Shahin Mehdizadeh to come up with a plan to address concerns about the force, including multiple allegations of corruption among its officers. That plan was revealed on Wednesday. (Government of Alberta; Meghan Grant/CBC)

Alberta's justice minister has given the police chief in Lethbridge a three-week deadline to produce a plan to shape up the force or see it be dissolved under an "extraordinary" step by the government, according to letters exclusively obtained by CBC News.

Justice Minister Kaycee Madu's letters to Chief Shahin Mehdizadeh, Lethbridge's mayor and the city's police commission chair follow recent complaints about the service includingthat six employees allegedlyusedpolice databases to do unauthorized searchesof a cabinet minister's personal information on police databases.

Two Lethbridge Police Service (LPS) officers have already been disciplined for photographing and followingLethbridge-West NDP MLA Shannon Phillipswhile she was environment minister under the previous NDP government, which was ousted by the United Conservative Party in 2019.Both officers were involved in the off-roading community, whose members were upset by the province's plans to restrict off-road vehicle use and create a provincial park in the environmentally sensitive Castle area of southwestern Alberta.

AndCBC News broke the story earlier this month thatfive officers had recently been suspended after theywere allegedly involved in creating and disseminating what have been described by sources as "toxic" memes targeting senior brass andPhillips.

Police given April 16 deadline for plan

In the letters,Madu reiterateshis "significant concerns" about the effectiveness of the LPSand citizens' confidence in the service.

The minister has given the chief an April 16 deadline for a detailed plan to address issues ofrecruiting, training, oversight, discipline, transparency and communications.

"Should I not see a plan for addressing the acknowledged issues, or should I not see evidence of progress in relation to acting upon that plan, I will be in a position of having to truly consider utilizing the extraordinary authorities available to me under section 30 of the Police Act," wrote Madu.

Under that section of the act, if the minister feels a municipality is not providing adequate and effective policing, he has the power to bring in anotherpolice service, dissolving the current force.

WATCH |Alberta's justice minister on what he wants from Lethbridge police:

Alberta's justice minister on what he wants from Lethbridge police

3 years ago
Duration 0:32
Alberta Justice Minister Kaycee Madu says he wants to solve the "culture of impunity" within the Lethbridge Police Service after giving a three-week deadline to produce a plan to shape up the force.

The communications from the minister follow an in-person meeting between Madu, Mehdizadeh and Lethbridge PoliceCommission (LPC) chair Robert Van Spronsen two weeks ago.

Madu has requested a well-defined plan including steps to monitor progress.

Although the minister questioned the ability of the force to deliver adequate and effective policing to the citizens of Lethbridge, he did acknowledge thatMehdizadeh shared those concerns and committed to "enactingsignificant changes" during their meeting.

Notley calls minister's approach 'reasonable'

In addressing the letters outside the legislature Wednesday afternoon, Madusaid the issues at LPS have been going on "for quite some time."

"I do not want a few bad eggs to taint an entire institution that's meant to keep and protect all of us," the minister told reporters.

WATCH |Rachel Notley responds to justice minister's deadline:

Rachel Notley responds to justice minister's deadline

3 years ago
Duration 0:49
Alberta NDP leader Rachel Notley says a three-week deadline imposed to the Lethbridge Police Service by Alberta's justice minister was a "reasonable approach," adding that public trust needed to be reinstated after recent scandals.

NDPleader Rachel Notleysaid she feels Madu is taking a"reasonableapproach" in his effort to reinstate public trust in LPS.

"We need to make darn sure that this kind of thing never happens again," said Notley.

"We cannot, under any circumstances, be in a position where law enforcement are able to bully or intimidate democratically elected representatives because they don't agree with decisions that they're taking."

LPScommitted to 'correcting past behaviours'

In a written statement released Wednesday afternoon, LPS said it plans to provide the plan"much earlier" than the April 16 deadline.

LPS says the service has been developing an action plan over the last several months to address the problems raised by the "troubling" cases.

"We are confident that the service is on the right path to correcting past behaviours and restoring public trust," reads the written statement.

"An underlying common theme will be to ensure consistent accountability and a consistently high standard of integrity in our service delivery."

LPS controversies

Earlier this year, Phillips won the right to appeal the discipline and seek a more severe outcome forthe two officers Const. Keon Woronukand Sgt. Jason Carrier who weretemporarily demotedforspying on Phillips while on dutyin 2017.

Alberta's Law Enforcement Review Board ruled that thepolice chief's process "lacked procedural fairness" and was"tainted and flawed, and lacked transparency."

 a woman stands in a jacket on a city street.
As CBC News reported, six Lethbridge Police Service employees undertook potentially unauthorized searches of NDP MLA Shannon Phillips' personal information on police databases while she was the province's environment minister under the previous NDP government. As well, two Lethbridge police officers were disciplined for doing unauthorized surveillance of Phillips and her brunch guests. (Dave Rae/CBC)

In recent weeks, Woronuk was suspended alongside four othersas part of an investigation into the circulation of inappropriate, "toxic"images, according to sources.

The chief has said a disciplinary hearing will take place in the coming weeks for those five officers.

In another Phillips-related scandal, documents showed an LPS civilian employee and five officers including a deputy chief and a staff sergeantaccessed personal information on the NDP MLA when she was environment minister,yet no investigative purpose was given for any of the searches.

The force also came under recent scrutiny when CBCNews reported that a retired LPS inspector, who was head of a victims advocacy group, had a sexual relationship with a clienta domestic violence survivor who said their relationship was not consensual.

When the woman went to the Lethbridge Police Serviceto complain, the man's friends and former colleagues were initially assigned to investigate him with the woman saying they were dismissive and that she worried about potential conflict of interest.

Two days after CBC News contacted Lethbridge police to inquire about the perceived conflict, the service handed the case over to the RCMP. Mehdizadeh says the service made the change before being contacted.


Meghan Grant is the courts and crime reporter for CBC Calgary.If you have a good story idea or tip, you can reach her atmeghan.grant@cbc.caor on Twitter at @CBCMeg. You can read more of her recent stories here: