N.S. RCMP serve notice to remove ‘police equipment’ from decommissioned car

RCMP say they served a notice to a resident of Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley to remove police equipment from a decommissioned vehicle.

The RCMP in Nova Scotia say someone reported on May 27 that an individual was driving a decommissioned police car, with a “police push bar attached to the front of it and ‘police interceptor’ markings on the back.”

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These items are prohibited under Nova Scotia’s Police Identity Management Act, which went into effect May 12.

The legislation was enacted two years after a man disguised as a Mountie and driving a replica RCMP cruiser killed 22 people in northern and central Nova Scotia. It prohibits the use, possession, sale or reproduction of police-issued items by those other than police organizations.

RCMP served a notice to the owner of the decommissioned car that he needed to remove the items or he would be charged.

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Last week, the man turned in the push bar and badge to the Bridgetown RCM detachment.

“The items will be destroyed by Annapolis District RCMP,” read the Friday release.

— with files from The Canadian Press

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