Following review, military police reopen 23 ‘unfounded’ sexual assault cases
OTTAWA — The Canadian Armed Forces has reopened 23 cases of alleged sexual assault after revisiting dozens of files previously dismissed by military police as “unfounded.”
The move follows an internal review last year that found nearly one in every three sexual-assault complaints logged with military police between 2010 and 2016 was deemed unfounded — a designation applied when investigators determine an offence did not occur.
That rate was higher than most civilian police forces in Canada and appeared to confirm some victims’ complaints that the Armed Forces did not investigate their cases properly and hold perpetrators accountable.
The Canadian Forces National Investigation Service, which investigates all major crimes in the military, subsequently launched a review of 179 cases and announced Thursday that 113 were indeed unfounded.


