Bruce Monkhouse said:
What I find disagreeable is that someone brought this e-mail to the media's attention, a little bit of a backstab maybe?
...
I sure would like for everyone to be able to see that E-mail and be able to judge for themselves whether a "slant" was put on it in the article, or not.
My hunch is the email surface via this ATI request:
A-2004-00300 All records regarding the involvement of Canadian personnel, including but not limited to Military Police and the Joint Task Force 2 in the detention and interrogation of prisoners, detainees or other persons in Afghanistan, from 1 Oct 2001 to 27 July 2004
Like most ATI requests put in, this one is very broadly worded to gain the maximum amount of information and no doubt netted quite a few other documents that may, or may not, have been germane to what the requestor was initially looking for. In this specific instance it appears to not only have netted a second story item, but also provided a nice, controversy generating, intro for the next story published two days later by the same writer which is covered in this thread
Canada's JTF2 captives vanish at Guantanamo. If anyone is in Ottawa and so desires, they should be able to go down and review all of the material released via the ATI at the reading room.
Email has become the defacto method of communicating amongst ourselves and things which we would have used the telephone for not so long ago are now committed to the corporate databank for eternity because it is so much easier to dash off a quick email rather than make the phone call and subsequently record it via a record of conversation. In most instances, this includes the retention of the informal tone we use when speaking to each other as opposed to the formal tone required when you actually drafted a message in the past and this can lead to poor optics if/when that email is subsequently released. We are all thoroughly briefed on what to do for a in person interview but we all need to be aware that our email may also end up in the news one day and while I don't advocate being paranoid, we always need to keep in mind that all email we generate via the DWAN is liable for release â Å“as isâ ? if someone submits an appropriately worded ATI request.
As for the flex-cuffs and hooding, it is my belief from my own experience, research and numerous conversations with pers who have attended the LOAC course and MP Use of Force instructors, that:
Hoods are an acceptable, although not preferred, method of depriving someone of their sight in a tactical situation, although their use needs to be carefully controlled and monitored with them being removed as soon as practicable.
For flex-cuffing, I haven't really considered the use of some of the solutions presented by Maj Wilson as these are not generally available outside of a correctional institution. When given the option of using standard handcuffs or flex-cuffs by non-MP personnel it is my belief flex-cuffs are preferable for a number of reasons, provided they are actual double loop flex-cuffs and not just two zap straps looped together... Again, due diligence must be applied and an appropriate tool (ASP Scarab or similar) must be available to remove them. It's important to note that these devices are acceptable for use here in mass arrest situations, if they're good enough for Canadian perps they're good enough for <insert country here> perps in my book.
Sorry for the tardy and verbose (as always) reply.