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Protests over suspension of 3 Manitoba border guards met with silence

The Canada Border Services Agency is ignoring protests over the suspension of three guards in Manitoba for leaving their posts to help RCMP. Global News

WINNIPEG – The Canada Border Services Agency is ignoring protests over the suspension of three Manitoba border guards who left their posts to help the RCMP arrest a suspect.

Both Public Security Minister Steven Blaney and the head of the border guards union say they haven’t received a response to letters they’ve sent to the agency appealing the suspensions.

A spokesman for Blaney said the minister is concerned because the government expects all law enforcement officers to help apprehend dangerous suspects.

The union has proposed a working group to study the agency’s policy regarding helping other police services.

A spokesman for the border services agency said he cannot comment on specific disciplinary cases and any employee has a right to grieve a decision internally.

The guards left their posts at the Canada-U.S. border at Emerson a few months ago, at the request of the Mounties, to help stake out a kidnapping suspect at a bar less than a kilometre away.

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READ MORE: Border guards suspended after helping RCMP in Manitoba: union

The union said two guards kept watch over several exits while a third went into the bar. The border remained staffed by three other guards on the night shift. The trio who helped the Mounties returned to their posts less than an hour later following the suspect’s arrest.

Following an internal investigation, they were suspended last month without pay for up to 25 days because they left their posts for an “unauthorized purpose.”

Blaney and the union argue the guards were complying with the Criminal Code, which compels them to co-operate fully with law enforcement officers.

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