Quebec’s anti-corruption unit lacking skills and training to fulfil mission: report
MONTREAL — Still reeling from accusations its investigators fabricated evidence, the province’s once-praised anti-corruption police unit is again the target of criticism.
The police force created to restore the public’s faith in democratic institutions lacks officers with the necessary skills to conduct complex investigations into financial crimes, according to a government report published Thursday.
Claude Corbo, head of the office that monitors Quebec’s anti-corruption police, recommends that the unit — known as UPAC — hire people with university degrees who are capable of handling lengthy investigations into “highly complex criminality.”
The report came amid a series of embarrassing scandals for the police force, which was created in 2011 by the Liberals following reports of widespread fraud and corruption in the public and private sectors.