The
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
(RCMP) ( (GRC), literally ‘Royal Gendarmerie of Canada’; colloquially known as
Mounties, and internally as ‘The Force’) is the
national police force of Canada
, and one of
the most recognized of its kind in the world. It is unique
in the world as a national, federal, provincial and municipal
policing body.
The RCMP provides federal policing service to
all of Canada
and policing
services under contract to the three territories, eight provinces
(except Ontario and Quebec), more than 190 municipalities, 184
Aboriginal communities and three international
airports.
The RCMP was formed in 1920 by the merger of the Royal Northwest
Mounted Police (RNWMP, founded 1873) with the
Dominion Police (founded 1868). The former
was originally named the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP), and was
given the
Royal prefix by King
Edward VII in 1904. Much of
the present-day organization's symbology has been inherited from
its days as the NWMP, including the distinctive
Red Serge uniform, paramilitary heritage, and
mythos as a frontier force. The RCMP/
GRC wording is
specifically protected under the Trade-marks Act.
Responsibilities
As the federal police force of Canada, the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police is primarily responsible for enforcing federal laws
throughout Canada, while general law and order including the
enforcement of the Criminal Code and applicable provincial
legislation is constitutionally the responsibility of the
provinces and
territories. This responsibility is sometimes further delegated
to municipalities which can form their own municipal police
departments. This is common in the largest cities; every city with
a population over 500,000 operates its own force.
The two
most populous provinces, Ontario
and Quebec
, maintain
their own provincial forces; the Ontario Provincial Police and
Sûreté du
Québec. The other eight provinces, however, have chosen
to contract most or all of their provincial policing
responsibilities to the RCMP. Under these contracts the RCMP
provides front-line policing in those provinces under the direction
of the provincial governments in regard to provincial and municipal
law enforcement. When Newfoundland joined confederation in 1949 the
RCMP entered the province and absorbed the then Newfoundland
Rangers and took over that area. Today the
Royal Newfoundland
Constabulary has reclaimed some of that province to their
jurisdiction. In the three territories, the RCMP serves as the sole
territorial police force.
Additionally, many municipalities throughout Canada contract the
RCMP to serve as their police force. The RCMP consequently provides
policing services at the federal, provincial and municipal
level.
The RCMP is responsible for an unusually large breadth of duties.
Under their federal mandate, the RCMP provides policing throughout
Canada, including Ontario and Quebec. Federal operations include;
enforcing federal laws, including commercial crime, counterfeiting,
drug trafficking, border integrity, organized crime and other
related matters; providing counterterrorism and domestic security;
providing
protection services for the
Monarch,
Governor General,
Prime Minister and other
ministers of the Crown, visiting
dignitaries, and diplomatic missions; and participating in various
international policing efforts. Under provincial and municipal
contracts the RCMP provides front-line policing in all areas
outside of Ontario and Quebec that do not have an established local
police force.
There are detachments located in small
villages in the far north, remote First Nations reserves, and rural
towns, but also larger cities such as Surrey,
BC
. In these provinces the RCMP maintains units
that provide investigational support to their own detachments, as
well as smaller municipal police forces, including the
investigation of major crimes such as homicides, forensic
identification services, police dog services, emergency response
teams, explosives disposal, undercover operations, and others.
Under its National Police Services branch the RCMP provides support
to all police forces in Canada through the operation of support
services such as the
Canadian Police Information
Centre, the
Criminal Intelligence
Service Canada, Forensic Science and Identification Services,
the
Canada Firearms Centre
and the Canadian Police College.
The
RCMP Security Service was a
specialized political intelligence and counterintelligence branch
with national security responsibilities, but was replaced with the
Canadian Security Intelligence
Service
in 1984, following revelations of illegal covert operations relating to the Quebec separatist
movement. CSIS is not part of the RCMP, but is its own
entity.
Duties, conduct and operational and reporting guidelines are very
specifically laid out in a detailed document known as the
Commissioner's Standing Orders, or
CSOs.
International responsibilities
The RCMP International Operations Branch assists the Liaison
Officer Program to deter international crime relating to Canadian
criminal laws. The IOB is a section of the International Policing,
which is part of the RCMP Federal and International Operations
Directorate. Thirty-five Liaison Officers are placed in 25 other
countries and are responsible for organizing Canadian
investigations in other countries, developing and maintaining the
exchange of
criminal
intelligence, especially
national
security with other countries, to provide assistance in
investigations that directly affect Canada, to coordinate and
assist RCMP officers on foreign business and to represent the RCMP
at international meetings.
Liaison Officers are located in:
- Washington, D.C.
, USA
- Miami, Florida
, USA
- Mexico City, Mexico

- Bogota, Colombia

- Caracas, Venezuela

- Brasilia, Brazil

- Santo Domingo, Dominican
Republic

- Port of Spain
,Trinidad and Tobago
- London
, United
Kingdom
- Paris, France

- Berlin, Germany

- The Hague, Netherlands

- Rome, Italy

- New Delhi, India

- Islamabad, Pakistan

- Bangkok, Thailand

- Hong Kong, China

- Beijing, China
- Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

- Rabat, Morocco

- Pretoria, South Africa

- Amman, Jordan

- Dubai, United Arab Emirates

History
Origins and early activities
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police has its beginnings in the
North-West Mounted Police (NWMP).
The police was established by an act of
legislation from the Temporary North-West Council
the first territorial government of the Northwest
Territories
. The Act was approved by the Government of
Canada and established on May 23, 1873, by Queen
Victoria, on the advice of
her Canadian Prime Minister,
John
A. Macdonald,
with the intent of bringing law and order to, and asserting
sovereignty over, the Northwest Territories
. The need was particularly urgent given
reports of American
whiskey traders, in particular those of Fort Whoop-Up, causing trouble in the region,
culminating in the Cypress Hills
Massacre. The new force was initially to be called the
North West Mounted Rifles, but this proposal was rejected as
sounding too militaristic in nature, which Macdonald feared would
antagonize both aboriginals and Americans; however, the force was
organized along the lines of a
cavalry
regiment in the
British Army, and was to wear red
uniforms.
The NWMP
was modelled directly on the Royal Irish Constabulary, a
civilian paramilitary armed police
force with both mounted and foot elements under the authority of
what was then the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland
. First NWMP commissioner, Colonel
George Arthur French visited Ireland to
learn its methods.

A North-West Mounted Police Lancer,
1875.
The
initial force, commanded by Commissioner French, was assembled at
Fort
Dufferin, Manitoba
. They departed on July 8, 1874, on a march to
what is now Alberta
.
The group comprised 22 officers, 287 men called constables and
sub-constables 310 horses, 67 wagons, 114 ox-carts, 18 yoke of
oxen, 50 cows and 40 calves. A pictorial account of the journey was
recorded in the diary of
Henri Julien,
an artist from the
Canadian Illustrated News,
who accompanied the expedition.
Their destination was Fort Whoop-Up, a notorious whiskey trading
post located at the junction of the
Belly and
Oldman
Rivers.
Upon arrival at Whoop-Up and finding it
abandoned the troop continued a few miles west and established
headquarters on an island in the Oldman, naming it Fort MacLeod
.
Historians have theorized that failure of the 1874
March
West would not have completely ended the Canadian federal
government's vision of settling the country's western plains, but
could have delayed it for many years.
It could also have
encouraged the Canadian Pacific
Railway to seek a more northerly route for its transcontinental
railway that went through the well-mapped and partially settled
valley of the North
Saskatchewan River, touching on Prince
Albert
, Battleford
and Edmonton
, and through the Yellowhead Pass
, as originally proposed by Sandford Fleming. This would have
offered no economic justification for the existence of cities like
Brandon
, Regina
, Moose
Jaw
, Swift
Current
, Medicine
Hat
, and Calgary
, which could, in turn, have tempted American
expansionists to make a play for the flat, empty southern regions
of the Canadian prairies.
The NWMP's early activities included containing the whiskey trade
and enforcing agreements with the First Nations peoples; to that
end, the
commanding officer of
the force arranged to be sworn in as a
justice of the peace, which allowed for
magisterial authority within the Mounties' jurisdiction. In the
early years, the force's dedication to enforcing the law on behalf
of the First Nations peoples impressed the latter enough to
encourage good relations between them and the Crown.
In the summer of
1876, Sitting Bull and thousands of
Sioux fled from the US Army towards what is
now southern Saskatchewan
, and James Morrow
Walsh of the NWMP was charged with maintaining control in the
large Sioux settlement at Wood Mountain
. Walsh and Sitting Bull became good friends,
and the peace at Wood Mountain was maintained. In 1885, the NWMP
helped to quell the
North-West
Rebellion led by
Louis Riel. They
suffered particularly heavy losses during the
Battle of Duck Lake, but saw little
other active combat.
Klondike Gold Rush
In 1896,
concerned about the influence of American miners and the ongoing
liquor trade, the Canadian
government sent inspector Charles Constantine to report on
conditions in the Yukon
.
Constantine correctly forecast a coming gold rush and urgently
recommended sending a force to secure Canadian sovereignty there
and collect customs duties; he returned the following year with a
force of 20 men. Under the command of Constantine, and his
successor in 1898, the more famous
Sam
Steele, the NWMP distinguished itself during the
Klondike Gold Rush, which started in
1896, making it one of the most peaceful and orderly such affairs
in history.
The NWMP not only enforced criminal law, but
also collected customs duties, established a number of rules such
as the "ton of goods" requirement for prospectors to enter the
Yukon to avoid another famine, mandatory boat inspections for those
wanting to travel the Yukon
River
, and created the Blue Ticket used to expel
undesirables from the Klondike. The Mounties did
tolerate certain illegal activities, such as gambling and prostitution, and the force did not succeed in
its attempt to establish order and Canadian sovereignty in Skagway,
Alaska
, at the head of the Lynn Canal
, instead creating the customs post at the summit of
the Chilkoot
Pass
. At that same time, the dissolution of the
NWMP was being discussed in the
House of Commons, but the gold
rush prospectors were so impressed by the conduct of the Mounted
Police that the force became world famous and its continuation was
ensured.
Evolution of the force
The
North-West Mounted Police's jurisdiction was extended northward to
the Yukon
Territory
in 1895
and then again in 1903 to the Arctic coast,
with the establishment of a post at Cape Fullerton
. In June 1904, the prefix "Royal" was
conferred on the NWMP by
King Edward
VII.
Jurisdiction was extended to the new
provinces of Alberta
and Saskatchewan
in 1905, and to Manitoba
's new annexation in 1912. During
World War I the RNWMP was responsible for
"border patrols, surveillance of enemy aliens, and enforcement of
national security regulations".
In 1917, provincial policing contracts were
terminated, and the RNWMP was responsible only for federal policing
in Alberta
, Saskatchewan
, and the Territories. Come 1918, however,
enforcement was once again extended to all four Western Provinces
(British
Columbia
, Alberta
, Saskatchewan
, and Manitoba
). A squadron was deployed to Vladivostok,
Russia in late 1918 as part of the
Canadian Siberian
Expeditionary Force.
Six months later, in June 1919, the RNWMP
was called in to repress the general strike in Manitoba's
capital, Winnipeg
, where officers fired into a crowd of strikers,
killing two and causing injury to thirty others.
Another
strike of that scale was never seen again, but clashes between the
RNWMP and strikers continued; Mounties killed three strikers in
1931, when striking coal miners from Bienfait,
Saskatchewan
demonstrated in nearby
Estevan
. These incidents did not help the image of
the RNWMP, which, since the end of
First
World War, was being looked at as an outdated institution, more
suited to the 19th century frontier than with an industrialising
20th century Canada.
Aylesworth Perry served as
Commissioner of the North-West Mounted Police from 1900 to 1922. It
was in this period that the force was faced, again, with
dissolution, but was saved in 1920 when it merged with the
Dominion Police and was renamed as the
"Royal Canadian Mounted Police". The new organization was charged
with federal law enforcement in all the provinces and territories,
and immediately set about establishing its modern role as protector
of Canadian national security, as well as assuming responsibility
for national
counterintelligence.
As part of its national security and intelligence functions, the
RCMP was responsible for infiltrating any ethnic or political
groups that were considered to be dangerous to Canada's existing
order. This included the
Communist Party of Canada, but
also a variety of minority cultural and nationalist groups. The
force was also deeply involved in immigration matters, and
especially deportations of suspected radicals. They were especially
concerned with
Ukrainian groups,
both nationalist and socialist. The
Chinese community was also targeted because
the perceived link to opium dens. Historians estimate that fully
two per cent of the Chinese community was deported between 1923 and
1932, largely under the provisions of the
Opium and Narcotics Drugs Act
(ONDA). Besides the RCMP's new responsibilities in intelligence,
drugs enforcement, and immigration, the force also and provided
assistance to numerous other federal agencies, such as enforcing
the
residential school system for
First Nations' children.
In 1935, the RCMP, collaborating with the
Regina Police Service, crushed the
On-to-Ottawa Trek by sparking the
Regina Riot, in which one city police
officer and one protester were killed. The Trek, which had been
organized to call attention to the abysmal conditions in the relief
camps, therefore failed to reach Ottawa, but nevertheless had
profound political reverberations.

RCMP patrolling with sled dogs,
1957.
The RCMP employed
special
constables to assist with
strikebreaking in the interwar period. For a
brief period in the late 1930s, a volunteer militia group, the
Legion of Frontiersmen were
affiliated with the RCMP. Many members of the RCMP belonged to this
organization, which was prepared to serve as an auxiliary force. In
later years, special constables performed duties such as policing
airports and, in certain Canadian provinces, the court
houses.
In 1932, men and vessels of the Preventive Service, National
Revenue, were absorbed, creating the RCMP Marine Section. The
acquisition of the RCMP
schooner
St. Roch facilitated the first
effective patrol of Canada's Arctic territory. It was the first
vessel to navigate the
Northwest
Passage from west to east (1940–42), the first to navigate the
Passage in one season (1944), and the first to circumnavigate
North America (1950).
Counterintelligence work was moved from the RCMP's
Criminal Investigation
Department to a specialized intelligence branch, the
RCMP Security Service, in 1939.
Post-war
Following
the 1945 defection of Soviet
cipher
clerk, Igor Gouzenko and his
revelations of espionage, the RCMP
Security Service implemented measures to screen out
“subversive” elements from the public sector. What began as a
perceived need to create a bulwark against communism had, by the 1950s, been extended to
homosexuality because homosexual acts
were illegal, considered a sign of “character weakness,” and
because the KGB
could use
it to blackmail civil servants into revealing state secrets.
Scores of people were fired as part of this campaign, which
included the development of a “
fruit
machine.” This machine was based on the premise that changes in
pupil dilation when viewing
beefcake photos
of nude men would scientifically determine whether or not a test
subject was gay. After four years, the machine failed to produce
results, and the program was discontinued.
In the late 1970s, revelations surfaced that the RCMP Security
Service force had in the course of their intelligence duties
engaged in crimes such as burning a barn and stealing documents
from the separatist
Parti
Québécois, and other abuses. This led to the
Royal
Commission of Inquiry into Certain Activities of the RCMP,
better known as the "McDonald Commission," named for the presiding
judge, Mr Justice David Cargill McDonald.
The Commission
recommended that the force's intelligences duties be removed in
favor of the creation of a separate intelligence agency, the
Canadian Security Intelligence
Service
(CSIS).
Modern era
In 1993, the
Special
Emergency Response Team (SERT), were transferred to the
Canadian Forces, creating a new unit
called
Joint Task Force Two (JTF2).
JTF2
inherited some equipment and SERT's former training base near
Ottawa
.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police have been involved in training
and logistically supporting the Haitian National Police since 1994,
a controversial matter in Canada considering allegations of
widespread human rights violations on the part of the HNP. Some
Canadian activist groups have called for an end to the RCMP
training.
The RCMP has also provided training overseas
in Iraq
and other
peace-keeping missions.
On March
3, 2005, four RCMP officers were fatally shot during an operation
to recover stolen property and investigate a possible marijuana grow-op in
Rochfort
Bridge, Alberta
. Shooter Jim Roszko, 46, then killed
himself. It was the single worst multiple killing of RCMP officers
since the
Northwest Rebellion.
One of the four Mounties killed had been on the job for only 17
days. The victims were:
- Const. Lionide (Leo) Nicholas Johnston, 34 Mayerthorpe
Detachment
- Const. Anthony Fitzgerald Orion Gordon, 28 Whitecourt Town
Detachment General Policing and Highway Patrol
- Const. Brock Warren Myrol, 29 Mayerthorpe Detachment
- Const. Peter Christopher Schiemann, 25 Mayerthorpe Detachment
General Policing and Highway Patrol
On October 29, 2005, constable Paul Koester shot and killed
Ian Bush while he was in custody. An
internal investigation resulted in no action being taken against
the constable, and, as a result, a public inquest was commissioned.
The inquest recommended that the RCMP refrain from carrying out
internal investigations with regard to fatal incidents involving
the RCMP and the public.
On July 7, 2006, two RCMP officers were shot to death near Mildred,
Saskatchewan. The alleged killer,
Curtis
Dagenais, 41, was missing until July 18, when he turned himself
in. The victims were:
- Const. Robin Cameron, 29: Spiritwood Detachment
- Const. Marc Bourdages, 26: Spiritwood Detachment
In 2006, the
United States
Coast Guard's Ninth District and the RCMP began a program
called "Shiprider," in which 12 Mounties from the RCMP detachment
at Windsor and 16 Coast Guard boarding officers from stations in
Michigan ride in each other's vessels. The intent is to allow for
seamless enforcement of the international border. (PA1 John Masson,
"Territorial Teamwork," Coast Guard Magazine 2/2006,
pp. 26–27).
On December 6, 2006, RCMP Commissioner
Giuliano Zaccardelli resigned one day
after informing the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public
Safety and National Security that his earlier testimony about the
Maher Arar case was inaccurate. The RCMP
had improperly given information to the US that resulted in Arar, a
Canadian returning to Montreal via the US, being sent to Syria
where he was imprisoned for 10 months and tortured into signing a
false confession of links to terrorists.Earlier, on September 28,
2006, and before the same Commons committee,
Commissioner Zaccardelli had issued a
carefully worded public apology to Arar and his family:
Mr. Arar, I wish to take this opportunity to express
publicly to you and to your wife and to your children how truly
sorry I am for whatever part the actions of the RCMP may have
contributed to the terrible injustices that you experienced and the
pain that you and your family endured.
On January 26, 2007, after months of negotiations between the
Canadian government and Arar's Canadian legal counsel, Prime
Minister Stephen Harper issued a formal apology "for any role
Canadian officials may have played in what happened to Mr. Arar,
Monia Mazigh and their family in 2002 and 2003" and announced that
Arar would receive $10.5 million settlement for his ordeal and an
additional $1 million for legal costs.
On
October 6, 2007, Constable Christopher John Worden of Hay River
Detachment, Northwest
Territories
was shot and killed in Hay
River
while on duty in that community. A
nationwide arrest warrant was issued for Emrah Bulatci. Bulatci was
apprehended on October 12 in Edmonton, Alberta.
On
October 14, 2007, Robert
Dziekański, an emigrant from Poland, was killed at Vancouver
International Airport
. Dziekański had failed to clear Customs and
after eight hours of loitering became agitated, perhaps because he
spoke no English and therefore was unable to ask for assistance.
Four RCMP officers were summoned after he threw a computer and a
small table. During his arrest, he was
Tasered
at least twice within 25 seconds of the officers' arrival. After
dropping to the floor, he was held down and handcuffed by the
officers. Paramedics pronounced him dead at the scene. The incident
was videotaped and eventually released to the public, resulting in
outrage over the RCMP's handling of the unarmed man. The Dziekanski
confrontation has provoked considerable debate about the use of
Tasers in policing.
On
November 6, 2007, Constable Doug Scott, 20, was killed in Kimmirut,
Nunavut
when responding to a report of a possible impaired driver. He had been with
the service for only six months.
In 2007, the RCMP was named
Newsmaker of the Year by the
Canadian Press.
History of the RCMP uniform
The RCMP are famous for their distinctive
Red
Serge, referred to as "Review Order" (of dress uniform)
consisting of: high collared scarlet tunic, midnight blue breeches
with yellow leg strip, Sam Browne belt with shoulder cross strap
and white sidearm lanyard, brown riding boots (possibly with
spurs), brown
Stetson hat (wide, flat
brimmed) and brown gloves (with brown leather gauntlets for
riders). Review Order is worn by the mounted troop performing the
Musical Ride, an equestrian drill in
which mounted members demonstrate their riding skills and handling
of the penneted cavalry lance (but not cavalry sabre). The
manoeuvres of "The Ride" are performed to musical accompaniment,
including the finale, which is a line abreast charge with lances
carried horizontally with tips forward as for a mounted assault. On
normal duties, the RCMP uses standard police methods, equipment,
and uniforms. Horses are still used for such ceremonial operations
as escorting the Governor General to the Opening of Parliament,
that is when escorting His or Her Excellency's open landau
(carriage).
The Red Serge tunic that identified initially the NWMP, and later
the RNWMP and RCMP, is of the standard British military pattern.
The NWMP was originally kitted out from
militia stores, resulting initially in several
different styles of tunic, although the style later became
standardized. This style was used both to emphasize the British
nature of the force and to differentiate it from the blue American
military uniforms. The blue shoulder epaulets were added in the
1920s, long after
King Edward VII
granted the Force "Royal" status for its service in the
Second Boer War, replacing gold-trimmed
scarlet straps from the earlier uniforms. Currently, RCMP personnel
under the rank of inspector wear blue "gorget" patches on the
collar, while officers from inspector to commissioner have solid
blue collars, along with blue pointed-sleeve cuffs.

Re-enactors portraying the NWMP K
Troop.
Initially the NWMP wore buff trousers. Later dark blue trousers
with yellow-gold strapping (stripes) were adopted. Members of the
NWMP were known to exchange kit with U.S. cavalry units along the
border and it is suggested that this was the initial source for the
trousers; however, blue trousers were considered early on, although
with a white strap. Dark blue with yellow-gold strapping is another
British cavalry tradition, and Canadian city police forces
frequently wear dark blue trousers with a narrow red strap of
artillery tradition.
The wide, flat-brimmed
Stetson hat was not
adopted officially until about 1904. Although the NWMP contingent
at
Queen Victoria's
Diamond Jubilee wore the Stetson, it
was an unofficial item of dress. The primary official summer
headdress at the time was the white British foreign service helmet,
also known as a
pith helmet. This was
not particularly practical as headdress in the Canadian west, and
members wore a Stetson type hat on patrol and around camp.
Sam Steele is often credited with introducing the
Stetson-type hat, and when he left the force to command
Lord Strathcona's Horse and took the
regiment to South Africa he also adopted the Stetson for this unit.
For winter a
Canadian
military fur wedge cap or
busby was
worn.
Black riding boots were later changed to the modern brown style.
The original crossbelts were later changed to the brown
Sam Browne type currently worn. The brown
color of the boots and belt worn with the Red Serge come from the
individual member applying numerous coats of polish, often during
their time in training at Depot Division.
Sidearms are standard now, but were often not worn in the early
years.
The everyday uniform consists of a grey shirt with dark blue tie,
dark blue trousers with gold strapping, regular patrol boots called
"ankle boots," regular duty equipment, and a regular policeman's
style cap. A blue
Gore-Tex open-collar
jacket (patrol jacket) is worn by members on operational duty,
while a dark blue jacket (blue serge),is worn by sergeants major
and certain
non-commissioned
officers (NCOs) usually involved in aspects of recruit training
or media relations. Officers wear white shirts and the patrol
jacket or blue serge, depending on their duties. Short-sleeved
shirts are worn in the summer by all members with no tie. Winter
dress consists of a long-sleeved shirt and tie for all members and,
depending on the climate of the detachment area, heavier boots,
winter coats (storm coats) and a fur cap are worn.
In British Columbia the hat features a black bearskin rim
belt.
In 1990,
Baltej Singh Dhillon
became the first
Sikh officer in the RCMP to be
allowed to wear a
turban instead of the
traditional
Stetson. On March 15, the
federal government, despite protests, decided that Sikhs would be
permitted to wear turbans while on duty as RCMP officers.
Women in the RCMP
On May 23, 1974, RCMP Commissioner M.J. Nadon announced that the
RCMP would begin to accept applications from females as regular
members of the force. This opened up positions that had been
previously reserved for male members. Troop 17 was the first group
of 32 females who arrived at Depot in Regina on September 18 and
19, 1974, to begin training to become regular members. This first
all-female troop graduated from Depot on March 3, 1975. After an
initial period of being required to wear rather unflattering
discrete female rig, women officers were ultimately given standard
RCMP uniforms and all officers are now identically attired
regardless of gender.
In 1981 the first female was promoted to corporal and the first
females served on the musical ride; in 1987 the first female served
in a foreign post; in 1990 the first female was appointed
detachment commander; in 1992 the first female officers were
commissioned and in 1998 the first female Assistant Commissioner
was appointed.
From December 15, 2006, to July 2007,
Beverley Busson served as interim
Commissioner of the RCMP, making her the first woman to hold the
top position in the force. She was replaced by
William J.S. Elliott on July 6, 2007, (Elliott was
sworn in on July 16—the first civilian to lead the RCMP.)
A regiment of dragoons
Although the RCMP is a civilian police force, in 1921, following
the service of many of its members during the
First World War,
King George V awarded the
force the status of a regiment of
dragoons,
entitling it to display the battle honours it had been awarded.
Service in wartime
During the
Second Boer War, members
of the North-West Mounted Police were given
leaves of absence to fight with the 2nd
Battalion, Canadian Mounted Rifles (CMR)
and
Lord Strathcona's Horse.
The force raised the Canadian Mounted Rifles, mostly from NWMP
members, for service in
South Africa.
For the CMR's distinguished service there, King
Edward VII honoured the
NWMP by changing the name to the
Royal Northwest Mounted
Police (RNWMP) on June 24, 1904.
During
World War I, the Royal Northwest
Mounted Police (RNWMP) conducted
border patrols,
surveillance of enemy
alien, and enforcement of
national security regulations within
Canada. However, RNWMP officers also served overseas.
On 6 August 1914, a
squadron of volunteers from the RNWMP was
formed to serve with the Canadian Light Horse in France
. In
1918, two more squadrons were raised,
A Squadron
for service in France and
Flanders and
B Squadron for service in the
Canadian Siberian
Expeditionary Force
In 1939, No. 1 Provost Company (RCMP),
Canadian Provost Corps, was raised
for service in Europe and served throughout
World War II as
Military Police.
Honours
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police were accorded the status of a
regiment of Dragoons in 1921, with its first guidon presented in
1935. As a
regiment of
dragoons, the RCMP was entitled to wear
battle honours for its war service as well as
carry a
guidon.
The RCMP mounted the
King's Life Guard at Horse Guards
Parade
in 1937 leading up to the coronation of King George VI.
- Battle honours:
- Northwest Canada 1885, South Africa 1900–02
- The
Great War: France
and
Flanders 1918, Siberia
1918–19
- The Second World War: Europe,
1939–45
- Honorary distinction:
- The badge of the Canadian Provost Corps (Military
Police)(presented 21 September 1957 at a Parliament Hill ceremony
for contributions to the Corps during the Second World War)
Organization
National
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is organized under the authority
of the
RCMP Act. In accordance with the
Act, it is headed by the Commissioner, who, under the direction of
the Minister of
Public Safety
Canada , has the control and management of the Force and all
matters connected therewith.
Under the Commissioner, operational direction is provided by Deputy
Commissioners in charge of:
- Federal Services and Central Region (Ottawa)
- Operations and Integration
- National Police Services
- Corporate Management and Comptrollership
- Atlantic Region (Halifax)
- North West Region (Regina)
- Pacific Region (Vancouver)
Regional
In 1996, the RCMP began moving towards a more regional management
system under the direction of deputy commissioners. These are:
Pacific, Northwestern, Central and Atlantic. The was done to allow
greater grass-roots involvement in decision-making and also allows
the RCMP to invest more resources into frontline services.
The RCMP divides the country into
divisions for command purposes.
In general, each
division is coterminous with a province (for example, C Division is
Quebec
). The province of Ontario
, however, is
divided into two divisions: A Division (Ottawa) and O Division
(rest of the province). There is one additional division Depot
Division, which is the RCMP Academy
at Regina, Saskatchewan
, and the Police Dog Service Training Centre at Bowden,
Alberta
. The RCMP headquarters are located in
Ottawa, Ontario.
Personnel
The RCMP employs 28,700 employees, including police officers,
civilian members, and Public Service Employees.
Actual Personnel Strength by Ranks:
- Commissioner 1
- Deputy Commissioner 8
- Assistant Commissioner 26
- Chief Superintendent 56
- Superintendent 186
- Inspector 433
- Corps Sergeant Major 1
- Sergeants Major 6
- Staff Sergeants Major 16
- Staff Sergeants 928
- Sergeants 2,090
- Corporals 3,570
- Constables 11,594
- Special Constables 74
- Civilian Members 3,607
- Public Servants 6,102
- Total 28,700
Regular Members
The term "Regular Member," or RM, originates from the RCMP Act and
refers to the 17,916 regular RCMP officers who are trained and
sworn as Peace Officers, and include all the ranks from Constable
to Commissioner. They are the police officers of the RCMP and are
responsible for investigating crime and have the authority to make
arrests. RMs operate in over 750 detachments, including 200
municipalities and more than 600 Aboriginal communities. RMs are
normally be assigned to general policing duties at an RCMP
detachment for a minimum of three years. These duties will allow
them to experience a broad range of assignments and experiences,
such as responding to alarms, foot patrol, bicycle patrol, traffic
enforcement, collecting evidence at crime scenes, testifying in
court, apprehending criminals and plain clothes duties. Regular
members also serve in over 150 different types of operational and
administrative opportunities available within the RCMP, these
include: major crime investigations, emergency response, forensic
identification, international peacekeeping, bike or marine patrol,
explosives disposal and police dog services. Also included are
administrative roles including human resources, corporate planning,
policy analysis and public affairs.
Auxiliary constables and other staff
Besides the regular RCMP officers, several types of designations
exist which give them assorted powers and responsibilities over
policing issues.
Currently, there are:
- Auxiliary
constables: 2,400
- Community Safety Officers: 17
- Reserve constables : not reported
- Special constables: 63
- Civilian members: 2,978
- Public servants: 4,626
- Auxiliary
constables (A/Cst.): Volunteers within their own community,
appointed under provincial police acts. They are not police
officers and can not identify themselves as such. However, they are
given peace officer powers when on
duty with a regular member (RM). Their duties consist mainly of
assisting the RM in routine events, for eg. cordoning off crime
scene areas, crowd control, participating in community policing, assistance during
situations where regular members might be overwhelmed with their
duties (eg. keep watch of a backseat detainee while RM interviews a
victim). They are identified by the wording of 'RCMP Auxiliary' on
cars, jackets and shoulder flashes.
- Community Safety Officers (CSO): A new
designation within the RCMP, beginning July 7, 2008, in the
Province of British
Columbia
, modelled after the UK Police Community Support
Officer program. Community Safety Officers are paid,
unarmed RCMP staff members with similar RCMP uniform but distinct
shoulder crests. CSOs work with regular members in five areas:
Community Safety; Crime Prevention; Traffic Support; Community
Policing and Investigation Support. They are peace officers but do
not have full police powers. The RCMP Community Safety Officer
program is a pilot project that will be evaluated in December
2009.
- Reserve constables (R/Cst.): A program
reinstated in 2004 in British Columbia
to allow for retired, regular RCMP members or other
provincially trained officers to provide extra manpower when a
shortage is identified. R/Cst. are appointed under Section
11 of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act as paid part
time, armed officers with the same powers as regular members.
However, they are not allowed to carry force-issued sidearms and
use of force options unless they are
called upon to duty. They generally carry out community policing roles but may also be
called upon if an emergency occurs.
- Special constables (S/Cst.): Employees of RCMP, have varied
duties depending on where they are deployed, but are often given
this designation because of an expertise they possess which needs
to be applied in a certain area. For example, an Aboriginal person
might be appointed a special constable in order to assist regular
members as they police an Aboriginal community where English is not
well understood, and where the special speaks the language
well.
- From the early years of policing in northern Canada, and well
into the 1950s, local aboriginal people were hired by the RCMP as
special constables and were employed as guides and to source and
care for sled dog teams. Many of these former special constables
still reside in the North to this day and are still involved in
regimental functions of the RCMP, especially with Canada's
declaration that 2005 be recognized as the "Year of the
Veteran".
- Civilian members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police: While
not delegated the powers of police officers, they are instead hired
for their specialized scientific, technological, communications and
administrative skills. Since the RCMP is a multi-faceted law
enforcement organization with responsibilities for federal,
provincial and municipal policing duties, it offers employment
opportunities for civilian members as professional partners within
Canada's national police force.
Civilian members represent approximately 14% of the total RCMP
employee population, and are employed within RCMP establishments in
most geographical areas of Canada. The following is a list of the
most common categories of employment that may be available to
interested and qualified individuals.
- Scientific
- Technical
- Computer systems development
- Public Service Employees: Also referred to as Public Servants,
PSes or PSEs, they provide much of the administrative support for
the RCMP in the form of detachment clerks and other administrative
support at the headquarters level. They are not police officers, do
not wear a uniform, have no police authority and are not bound by
the RCMP Act.
- Municipal Employees:
Abbreviated as "ME" they are found in RCMP detachments where a
contract exists with a municipality to provide front-line policing.
MEs are not actually employees of the RCMP, but are instead
employed by the local municipality to work in the RCMP detachment.
They conduct the same duties that a PSE would and are required to
meet the same reliability and security clearance to do so. Many
detachment buildings house a combination of municipal and
provincially funded detachments, and therefore there are often PSEs
and MEs found working together in them.
Ranks
The rank system of the RCMP illustrates their origin as a
paramilitary force. The insignia were based
upon the
Canadian army of the time,
which is almost identical to that of the current
British Army. Higher ranks have been increased
over the years since the formation of the force, whereas the rank
of
inspector, which was initially a
subaltern, is now a
field officer level, the lower officer ranks
having been dropped. With the
military introducing the
warrant officer, the RCMP non-commissioned
officers were maintained using the older military style.
The ranks of the RCMP, in English and French, are (numbers as of
September 1, 2009):
| Enlisted Rank Structure of the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police |
| Commissioned officers |
Commissioner/Commissaire
1
|
Deputy
Commissioner/Sous-commissaire
8
|
Assistant Commissioner/Commissaire
adjoint
26
|
|
|
|
Chief
Superintendent/Surintendant principal
56
|
Superintendent/Surintendant
186
|
|
|
Inspector/Inspecteur
433
|
|
| Non-commissioned officers |
Corps Sergeant Major/Sergent-major du
corps
1
|
Sergeant
Major/Sergent-major
6
|
Staff Sergeant Major/Sergent-major d'état
major
16
|
Staff
Sergeant/Sergent d'état-major
928
|
Sergeant/Sergent
2,090
|
|
|
|
|
|
Corporal/Caporal
3,570
|
Constable/Gendarme
11,594
|
|
(no rank badge) |
The ranks of inspector and higher are commissioned ranks and are
appointed by the Governor-in-Council. Depending on the dress,
badges are worn on the shoulder as slip-ons, on shoulder boards, or
directly on the
epaulettes. The lower
ranks are non-commissioned officers and the insignia continues to
be based on British army patterns. Since 1990, the non-commissioned
officers’ rank insignia has been embroidered on the epaulette
slip-ons. Non-commissioned rank badges are worn on the right sleeve
of the scarlet/blue tunic and blue jacket. The constables wear no
rank insignia. There are also special constables, auxiliary
constables, and students who wear identifying insignia.
Equipment and vehicles
Land fleet
RCMP Land Transport Fleet Inventory includes:
- Cars: 5,600
- Trucks: 2,350
- Motorcycles: 34
- Small snowmobiles: 481
- All-terrain vehicles: 181
- Gas railway car: 1
- Tractors: 27
- Buses: 3
- Total: 8,677
Many of the following vehicles have been used by the RCMP as marked
police vehicles:
Marine craft
The RCMP
is responsible for policing in Canadian Internal Waters, including
the territorial sea and contiguous zone as well as the Great Lakes
and St. Lawrence
Seaway; such operations are provided by the RCMP's Federal
Services Directorate and includes enforcing Canada's environment,
fisheries, customs and immigration laws. In provinces and
municipalities where the RCMP performs contract policing, the force
is also responsible for policing on freshwater lakes and
rivers.
To meet these challenges, the RCMP operates what is known as the
Marine Division, with five high-speed
catamaran patrol vessels;
Inkster and the
Commissioner-class
Nadon,
Higgitt,
Lindsay and
Simmonds, based on all three coasts
and manned by officers specially trained in maritime enforcement.
Inkster is based in Prince Rupert, BC,
Simmonds
is stationed on the south coast of Newfoundland, and the rest are
located on the Pacific Coast.
The RCMP owns and operates 377 smaller boats at various locations
across Canada, these include all vessels less than long. This
category includes from canoes and car toppers to rigid-hulled
inflatables and the very stable, commercially-built,
inboard/outboard vessels. Individual detachments often have smaller
high-speed
rigid-hulled
inflatable boats and other purpose-built vessels for inland
waters, some of which can be hauled by road to the nearest
launching point.
Aircraft fleet

Royal Canadian Mounted Police Cessna
Caravan on floats at Vancouver International Airport.
As of January 2007 the
Aerospace Source Book (ASB)
published by
Aviation Week & Space
Technology showed the RCMP operating a fleet of 33
aircraft (8
helicopters and 25
fixed-wing aircraft. As of 4 March 2009
the RCMP had 42 aircraft (10 helicopters and 32 fixed-wing
aircraft) registered with
Transport
Canada (TC). All aircraft are operated and maintained by the
Air Services Branch. Only the Twin Otter and the Avanti are
twin-engine aircraft, all the others, including the helicopters,
are single engine.
RCMP Fleet
| Aircraft |
Number
(ASB)
|
Number
(TC)
|
Variants |
Idents |
Notes |
| Bell 206 JetRanger |
4 |
0 |
L-1, L-4 |
|
Helicopter, JetRanger |
| Cessna 182 Skylane |
1 |
0 |
182Q |
|
Fixed wing, Skylane, light utility aircraft |
| Cessna 206 Stationair |
1 |
5 |
U206G, T206H |
C-FDGM, C-FDTM, C-FHGY, C-FSWC, C-GTJN |
Fixed wing, Stationair (Station
wagon of the Air), general
aviation aircraft |
| Cessna 208 Caravan |
3 |
3 |
208, 208B |
C-FRPH, C-FSUJ, C-GMPR |
Fixed wing, Caravan, short-haul regional airliner and utility aircraft |
| Cessna 210 Centurion |
4 |
4 |
210R |
C-FMOM, C-GHVP, C-GNMK, C-GTCT |
Fixed wing, Centurion, high-performance general aviation
aircraft |
| de Havilland Canada
DHC-2 Beaver |
0 |
1 |
Turbo-Beaver III |
C-FMPC |
Fixed wing, bush plane |
| de Havilland
Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter |
2 |
2 |
300 Series |
C-FMPL, C-GMPJ |
Fixed wing, 20-passenger STOL feederliner
and utility aircraft |
| Eurocopter EC 120
Colibri |
0 |
2 |
EC 120B |
C-FMPQ, C-GMPT |
Light helicopter, "Hummingbird" |
| Eurocopter AS 350 Ecureuil |
4 |
8 |
AS 350B3 |
C-FGSB, C-FMPG, C-FMPH, C-FMPP, C-FRPQ, C-GMPF, C-GMPK,
C-GMPN |
Helicopter, AStar 350 or "Squirrel" |
| Piaggio P180 Avanti |
1 |
1 |
P180 |
C-GFOX |
Fixed wing, business aircraft, pusher configured |
| Pilatus PC-12 |
13 |
16 |
PC-12/45, PC-12/47, PC-12/47E |
C-FMPA, C-FMPB, C-FMPE, C-FMPF, C-FMPN, C-FMPO, C-FMPW, C-GFLA,
C-GMPE, C-GMPI, C-GMPM, C-GMPP, C-GMPW, C-GMPX, C-GMPY, C-GMPZ |
Fixed wing, turboprop passenger and
cargo aircraft |
Equipment
Past equipment:
Popular awareness of the RCMP

A collection of RCMP souvenirs from
around Canada.
The
Mounties have been immortalized as symbols of Canadian culture in numerous Hollywood
movies and television series, which often feature
the image of the Mountie as square-jawed, stoic and polite, yet
with a steely determination and physical toughness that sometimes
appears superhuman. Coupled with the adage that the Mountie
"always gets his man," the image projects them as fearsome,
incorruptible, dogged yet gentle champions of the law. Actually,
the RCMP's motto is
Maintiens le droit French for "Defending the law". The
Hollywood motto derives from a comment by the Montana newspaper,
the
Fort Benton Record: "They fetch their man every
time".
In 1912,
Ralph Connor's
Corporal
Cameron of the North-West Mounted Police: A Tale of the MacLeod
Trail appeared, becoming an international best-selling novel.
Mounties fiction became a popular genre in both pulp magazines and
book form. Among the best-selling authors who specialized in tales
of the Mounted Police were
James
Oliver Curwood,
Laurie York
Erskine, James B Hendryx, T Lund, Harwood Steele (the son of
Sam Steele) and William Byron Mowery.
In other media, a famous example is the
radio
and
television series,
Sergeant Preston of the
Yukon. Dudley Do-Right (of
The Rocky and
Bullwinkle Show) is a 1960s example of the comic aspect of
the Mountie myth.
The Broadway
musical and Hollywood movie Rose-Marie is a 1930s example of its
romantic side. A successful combination were a series of
Renfrew of the Royal
Mounted boy's adventure novels written by
Laurie York Erskine beginning in 1922
running to 1941. In the 1930s Erskine narrated a
Sgt Renfrew of
the Mounties radio show and a series of films with
actor-singer James Newill playing Renfrew were released between
1937 and 1940. In 1953 portions of the films were mixed with new
sequences of Newill for a
Renfrew of the Mounted
television series.
A former Mounted Police corporal (1919–1923), Bruce Carruthers,
served as an unofficial
technical
advisor to Hollywood in many films on the Force.
Modern culture
Canadians also poke fun at the RCMP with
Sergeant Renfrew and his faithful dog Cuddles
in various sketches produced by the
Royal Canadian Air Farce
comedy troupe. On
That '70s
Show Mounties were played by
SCTV alumni
Joe Flaherty and
Dave Thomas. The British have also
exploited the myth: the
BBC television series
Monty Python's Flying
Circus featured a group of Mounties singing the chorus in
The Lumberjack Song in
the
lumberjack sketch.
The 1972–90 CBC series
The Beachcombers featured a
character named Constable John Constable who attempted to enforce
the law in the town of Gibsons, British Columbia.
In comic books, the
Marvel Comics
characters of
Alpha Flight were
described on several occasions as "RCMP auxiliaries," and two of
their members,
Snowbird and the
second
Major Mapleleaf were depicted
as serving members of the force. In the latter case, due to
trademark issues, Major Mapleleaf was described as a "Royal
Canadian Mountie" in the opening roll call pages of each issue of
Alpha Flight he appeared in.
In the early 1990s, Canadian
professional wrestler Jacques Rougeau utilized the
gimmick of "The
Mountie" while wrestling for the
WWF. He typically wore the Red
Serge to the ring, and carried a shock stick as an illegal weapon.
As his character was portrayed as an evil Mountie, the RCMP
ultimately won an injunction preventing Rougeau from wrestling as
this character in Canada, though he was not prevented from doing so
outside the country. He briefly held the
Intercontinental
Championship in 1992.
The 1998 swan song of Nick Berry's time on UK drama
Heartbeat featured his character, Sergeant Nick Rowan,
transferring to Canada and taking the rank of constable in the
Mounties. The special telemovie was titled
Heartbeat: Changing
Places.
In the
1994–98 TV series Due South
paired a Mountie (and his deaf pet wolf) with a streetwise American
detective cleaning up the streets of Chicago
, mainly deriving its entertainment from the
perceived differences in attitude between
these two countries' police forces. A pair of Mounties
staffed the RCMP Detachment in the fictional town of Lynx River,
Northwest Territories, in the CBC series
North of 60. The series, which aired from
1992 to 1998, was about events in the native community of the town,
but the Mounties featured prominently in each episode.
Another TV series from 1990s,
Bordertown featured a NWMP corporal paired
with a
U.S. marshal securing law and
order on a frontier U.S.-Canadian bordertown. The Mounties also
briefly appeared in an episode of
Harvey Birdman, Attorney at
Law, when after a mind taking battle between Mentok and
Shado, the entire jury in the courtroom seems to have turned into
Mounties. In the ABC TV mini-series
Answered By Fire, there are at least
three mounties featured.
The 1987 Brian de Palma film
The Untouchables featured
cooperation between
Eliot Ness's Treasury
Department task force and the Mounties against liquor smuggling
across the American-Canadian border.
In the episode "Up the Creek" on the 2007-08 Canadian
cartoon/reality show,
Total Drama
Island, one of the contestants,
Izzy, fled the
island after the "fictional" R.C.M.P. found her (she accidentally
blew up the R.C.M.P. kitchen while training with the
Reserves).
Mountie merchandise
There are products and merchandise that are made in the image of
the RCMP, like Mounties statues or hats. Before 1995, the RCMP had
little control over these products.
The
RCMP Heritage Centre is a
multi-million dollar museum designed by Arthur Erickson that opened May 2007 in
Regina,
Saskatchewan
at the RCMP Academy, Depot Division
. It replaced the old RCMP museum and is
designed to celebrate the role of the force in Canada's
history.
Trademark
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police received an international licence
on 1 April 1995 requiring those who use the RCMP to pay a licensing
fee. Proceeds from the fees would be used for community awareness
programmes. Those that do not pay the licensing fee are legally
unable to use the name of the RCMP or their correct uniforms,
though a film such as
Canadian
Bacon used the name "Royal Mounted Canadian Police" (RMCP)
and the character in the
Dudley
Do-Right film did not wear accurate insignia.
The
Mounted Police
Foundation was set up in 1995 to handle the licensing issues to
ensure only high-quality products were sold. However, as the
Mounted Police Foundation did not have the expertise on licensing
and marketing, they contracted these responsibilities out to Walt
Disney Co. (Canada) Ltd., the Toronto-based branch of
The Walt Disney Company. This
generated some controversies, as some people feared that the deal
would threaten the Canadian autonomy in representing Canada. The
contract with Disney expired in 2000. The licensing program is now
operated by the RCMP Foundation.
Criticism
Recent events have caused public criticism of the RCMP, as well as
an increasing public perception that the police force is
unaccountable to the public.
In 2005,
Ian Bush was killed while in
police custody in Houston, BC. The 22 year old man was shot by an
RCMP constable, and died from the gunshot wound to the back of the
head. An RCMP investigation ruled the killing to be self-defence.
In response to inquiries about the RCMP's policies on holding
prisoners, Const. John Ward stated "The public doesn't have a right
to know anything."
In
October 2007, Robert Dziekański died
at Vancouver Airport
while in the custody of four RCMP officers, after
being shot with a taser 5 times.
Initial
police accounts of the incident were contradicted by video evidence
taken by a witness, and , a public inquiry
is underway. Justice Braidwood has given
notice that he may make findings of misconduct against the four
RCMP members involved.
See also
References
- http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/about-ausujet/index-eng.htm
- Trade-marks Act
- "Inquiry Into Certain Activities of the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police, Royal Commission of," Canadian
Encyclopedia. Retrieved 26 August 2007.
- Diary of Commissioner George Arthur French,
August 20, 2005
- http://www.ourheritage.net/julien_pages/Julien1.html
- Regehr, T. D. "Fleming, Sir Sandford", in Canadian
Encyclopedia (Edmonton, Alberta: Hurtig Publishers, 1988),
Volume 2, p.791, & diagram Volume 1, pp.346–7.
- Hewitt, Steve. "Policing the Promised Land: The RCMP and
Negative Nation-building in Alberta and Saskatchewan in the
Interwar Period", The Prairie West as Promised Land ed. R.
Douglas Francis and Chris Kitzan (Calgary: University of Calgary
Press, 2007), 318-320.
- Hewitt, 322
- Reg Whitaker, “Left-Wing Dissent and the State: Canada in the
Cold War Era.” In C. E. S. Franks, Dissent and the State,
Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1988, 195. ISBN
0-195407-42-3
- John Sawatsky, Men in the Shadows: The Shocking Truth about
the RCMP Security Service, Toronto: Totem Books, 1980, 124,
130. ISBN 0-002168-21-9
- John Sawatsky, Men in the Shadows: The Shocking Truth about
the RCMP Security Service, Toronto: Totem Books, 1980,
133–138. ISBN 0-002168-21-9
- Nancy Nicol, “Selections from ‘Stand Together’: National Security
Campaigns," JSPOT: Journal of Social and Political
Thought, no. 5 (Summer 2003).
- Gary Kinsmen, "'Character Weakness' and 'Fruit Machines':
Towards an Analysis of the Anti-Homosexual Security Campaign in the
Canadian Civil Service," Labour/Le Travail, 35 (Spring
1995): 133–162.
- Website and Support Hits the Streets"
- CBC
- RCMP chief apologizes to Arar for 'terrible
injustices'
- CTV.ca 6 November 2007
- Canoe.ca News 25 December 2007
-
http://www.regiments.org/regiments/na-canada/cav/RCMP.htm#colours
- heraldist1
- Organization of the RCMP
- Organization of the RCMP
- New category of RCMP member a first for British
Columbia
- Enhanced Policing Options—Community Safety
Officers
- RCMP Reserve Program
- Local officer named first female reserve
constable
- Retired Mounties back in saddle
- Organization of the RCMP
- http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/land-terre/index-eng.htm
- http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/mari/index-eng.htm
- http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/mari/index-eng.htm
- "World Military Aircraft Inventory", Aerospace Source Book
2007, Aviation Week & Space
Technology, January 15, 2007.
- Transport Canada listing of aircraft owned by the
RCMP (enter Government of Canada, Royal Canadian Mounted Police
in the box titled "Owner Name")
- Force's legacy endures, Toronto Star, March 5,
2005
- Barr, William Red Serge and Polar Bear Pants" The Biography
of Harry Stallworthy, RCMP University of Alberta Press
2004
- For the Mounties, Justice Is Now a Licensing
Fee—New York Times
- http://thetyee.ca/News/2006/09/13/IanBush/
-
http://www.vancouversun.com/news/Mounties+involved+Dziekanski+death+launch+appeal/1747451/story.html
Further reading
External links