Dogged for years by complaints, lawsuits, alleged civil and Indigenous rights violations and now an ongoing federal investigation, the RCMP's Community-Industry Response Group (C-IRG) officially has a new name and mandate.
The outfit, originally tasked with policing protests against resource extraction in British Columbia, became the Critical Response Unit (CRU-BC) on Jan. 1, 2024.
The rebrand aims "to better reflect the scope of work and service that its members are called to," according to an April 2 update to the unit's webpage.
"Now named CRU-BC, its members will continue to assist in civil and public order events for natural or human-caused disasters, conduct proactive engagement and, if required, enforcement duties specific to the critical incident."
The unit was founded in 2017 to address what RCMP call "energy industry (gas and oil pipeline) incidents," but the update says over time, "as members of the C-IRG gained experience in addressing these large public order events," they were called to other demonstrations in other areas, leading to the expansion.
Between 2019 and 2021, the unit grabbed national attention for its heavily armed raids on Wet'suwet'en-led blockades as well as its Fairy Creek operation on Vancouver Island in 2021.
The RCMP's external federal review agency accepted more than 100 formal complaints for investigation against C-IRG, linked mainly to Fairy Creek, and in March 2023 opened a systemic investigation into its operations.
The Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs has called for its disbandment on multiple occasions.
The unit are obviously a counter insurgent militant operation and no name switch is going to change that fact. Their mandate is and always will be to protect corporate interests. Fuck you Jason Charney.
Absolutely. Maybe they can explain this: