RCMP don't know identity of person who submitted false tips about Michel Vienneau - Action News
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New Brunswick

RCMP don't know identity of person who submitted false tips about Michel Vienneau

Nova Scotia RCMP say they don't know the identity of the person who submitted false Crime Stoppers tips about Michel Vienneau, tips that led to his fatal shooting by Bathurst police more than five years ago.

Anonymous Crime Stoppers tips alleged Vienneau was trafficking drugs, led to fatal shooting by Bathurst police

Michel Vienneau, 51, of Tracadie, had come off a Via Rail train from Montreal and was in his car when he was shot and killed by police investigating Crime Stoppers tips. (Submitted by Nicolas Vienneau)

Nova Scotia RCMP say they don't know the identity of the person who submitted false Crime Stoppers tips about Michel Vienneau, tips that led to his fatal shooting by Bathurst police more than five years ago.

Over several months, CBC News has asked the RCMP whether they investigated the source of the false tips after documentsrevealed police considered apublic mischiefinvestigation of the tips.

Until now, it wasn't clear if such an investigation had taken place and whether police determined who submitted the tips.

"We do not know the identity of the tipster," RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Jennifer Clarke said in an email last week.

Clarke said police would "not breach the integrity" of the Crime Stoppers program, which promises to keep legitimate tipsters anonymous.

Nova Scotia RCMPcarried out the investigation of Vienneau's Jan. 12, 2015 shooting death. He was shot by Bathurst Police ForceConst. Mathieu Boudreau, one of six undercover officers waiting for Vienneau at the Bathurst train station, based on anonymous tips that he was trafficking drugs.

The 51-year-old Tracadie businessman was returning from a weekend trip to Montreal to watch a hockey game with hisfiance, Annick Basque.

RCMPdetermined Vienneau wasn't trafficking drugs and found no evidence of criminallinks.

RCMP might never know who submitted false tips about Michel Vienneau

5 years ago
Duration 1:31
RCMP might never know the identity of the person who submitted false tips that Michel Vienneau was trafficking drugs. The tips led to his fatal shooting by Bathurst police.

The Bathurst tips weresealed by a 2016 court order.What's known about the tips has emerged through testimony during court proceedings and a discipline hearing fortwo officers involved in the shooting.

Notes of meetings between RCMP investigators released to CBC last year saidthe force's criminal operations unit "officers want usto investigate the Public Mischief."

The notes statethere was a discussion about the "privacy concerns of tipsters and Crime Stoppers program integrity."

A woman and man smiling.
Michel Vienneau and Annick Basque were returning from Montreal. (Facebook)

Public mischief is acharge under the Criminal Codefor someone who intentionally misleads a police officer to start an investigation by making a false statementaccusing someone of committing an offence, orcauses some other person to be suspected of a crime they haven'tcommitted.

However, it was unclear if such an investigation had taken place.

RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Lisa Croteaulast year saidCrime Stoppershas mechanisms in place to keep the identity of tipstersanonymous.

"As a result, unlessthetipstergivesidentifying informationduring the conversation, their identitystays anonymous," Croteau said in a Dec. 10 email."As such, there is no way to investigate a tipster who reports something through Crime Stoppers."

But it wasn't until Clarke's subsequentemail last week that the force confirmed it had not determined the identity of the tipster.

Nova Scotia RCMP conducted the investigation into the shooting. (RCMP)

Tips can be submitted to Crime Stoppers by phone, text and through an online form. The civilian-run program takes the information, strips out any identifying information and then passes it along to the relevant police force.

The Crime Stoppers New Brunswick website states it doesn't use caller ID and IP addresses are "not available to us."

Vienneau's family has offered a $10,000 reward for information that could lead to the arrest and conviction of people involved in the shooting, which could include the tipster.

Officers cleared

Boudreau and his partner Const. Patrick Bulger were cleared of wrongdoing last year following an arbitration hearing. They had been suspended with pay pending the outcome of the hearing.

Both officers were expected to begin to resume their duties on Jan. 20, Bathurst officials had said.

The provincial government has ordered a coroner's inquest into Vienneau's death. No date has been set.

An inquest is a formal court proceeding that allows for public presentation of evidence relating to a death to help clarify the facts and circumstances.

The coroner does not assign responsibility or blame, but there may be recommendations on how to prevent similar deaths in the future.