The federal Fisheries Department says it is concerned about a “pattern” of violence and threats toward its enforcement officers after two tense incidents off southwestern Nova Scotia last month.
In a news release today, the department cites a Sept. 19 case in St. Marys Bay, alleging that fishery officers faced “an attempted assault while conducting routine at-sea enforcement activities.”
The investigators say they made arrests and seized the vessel and unauthorized lobster traps, and referred the assault investigation to the RCMP.
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The release also says that on Sept. 25 fishery officers attempted to board and inspect a vessel in St. Marys Bay but the operator tried to evade them, leading to a collision between the two vessels.
The comments from the Fisheries Department come as some officers have refused to participate in enforcement duties, making a claim under the Canada Labour Code that their work is too dangerous.
RCMP spokesman Cpl. Guillaume Tremblay said officers laid charges of obstruction and assaulting a police officer against a 27-year-old man in the Sept. 19 case but concluded no crime occurred in the Sept. 25 incident.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 4, 2024.
© 2024 The Canadian Press