National Post (National Edition)

RCMP apologize for conduct in Indigenous woman’s death

Amber Tuccaro investigat­ion ‘not best work’

- BOB WEBER

EDMONTON • The commanding officer of the RCMP in Alberta has apologized to the family of an Indigenous woman who disappeare­d nine years ago and whose killer has never been found.

Amber Tuccaro was 20 years old in August 2010 when she flew to Edmonton from her home in Fort McMurray, Alta., and booked into a hotel near the airport.

The woman from the Mikisew Cree Nation caught a ride into the city with a man the next day and was never seen alive again.

Her skull was found in a wooded area two years later.

An independen­t federal review released in 2018 found that the Leduc detachment’s investigat­ion of her disappeara­nce was deficient.

“I fully acknowledg­e that in the early days of our investigat­ion into Amber’s disappeara­nce that it required a better sense of urgency and care,” Deputy Commission­er Curtis Zablocki told Tuccaro’s family Thursday at RCMP headquarte­rs in Edmonton.

“Our Leduc detachment’s missing person investigat­ion was not our best work and was not in line with our establishe­d practices, procedures and guidelines.

“At the beginning of this investigat­ion the RCMP was not the police service we strive to be.

“On behalf of the RCMP, I am truly sorry.”

After his apology, Tuccaro’s family unveiled a new poster urging anyone with informatio­n on the case to contact police.

“Today I don’t know how I feel. I really don’t,” said Tuccaro’s mother, Tootsie Tuccaro. “I’m angry. I’m hurt. I’m just messed up.

“But ... like Amber always told me, ‘You got this, mama,’ and I do.”

Amber Tuccaro flew to Edmonton with her 14-monthold son and a female friend. The next day, police said, she left her hotel room to catch a ride into Edmonton and got into an unknown man’s vehicle.

In 2012, police released a cellphone recording between Tuccaro and the man who gave her a ride.

“You’d better not be taking me anywhere I don’t want to go,” Tuccaro can be heard telling the man. “I want to go into the city.”

In September 2012, a group of horseback riders discovered a skull in a wooded area in a field on a rural property near Leduc, Alta. It was identified through dental records as Tuccaro’s.

Her brother, Paul Tuccaro, testified at the national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls during its hearings in Edmonton. Sounding baffled and hurt, he spent two hours describing a lackadaisi­cal RCMP investigat­ion.

He said RCMP downplayed the family’s concerns about his sister’s disappeara­nce.

Tuccaro’s name was wrongly removed from the missing persons list and it was a month before she was put back on. No apology was made, her brother said.

He also said RCMP told the family that investigat­ors had the cellphone tape for a year before releasing it.

RCMP didn’t keep in touch during the investigat­ion after her remains were found, he said. The family was passed around from officer to officer.

Her belongings sat in a hotel room for months before police took them and eventually threw them away.

Tuccaro said his mother would have liked to have had her daughter’s possession­s back — quite apart from their value as evidence.

“We asked for a public apology. They said no.”

 ?? SHAUGHN BUTTS / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Tootsie Tuccaro, mother of Amber Tuccaro, breaks down at a new conference where the Alberta RCMP apologized
for its conduct in investigat­ing Amber’s death.
SHAUGHN BUTTS / POSTMEDIA NEWS Tootsie Tuccaro, mother of Amber Tuccaro, breaks down at a new conference where the Alberta RCMP apologized for its conduct in investigat­ing Amber’s death.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada