I've just had a thought about this statement that Rob wrote at TPUC on December 22nd;
However one of their crew made the very grave mistake of sending a letter to my home, making veiled threats against me, and has been reported to the RCMP. There is now an investigation underway to identify that person, and they will be facing criminal charges in the new year for criminal harassment. When the court sees how for the last decade, for his own amusement, he has been harassing and defaming, he will pay the piper.
Rob has been staying a bit east of Montreal for almost the past year. He clearly stated that he went to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to make his complaint about me. However the RCMP doesn't operate in Quebec as a local policing force, they have no jurisdiction there. To complain about me to the police in Quebec Rob would have had to go to the Sûreté du Québec.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C3%BBre ... u%C3%A9bec
So. If he's claiming that he complained to the RCMP while in Quebec he's just telling another of his tall tales. There is however another intriguing possibility. Let's be generous and accept that he reported me to the RCMP. If so, where, exactly, did he make the report?
First a bit of background on the RCMP's jurisdiction. It is essentially Canada's "default" police force. Provinces and municipalities are free to set up their own police forces. If they don't they can employ the services of the RCMP instead.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP; French: Gendarmerie royale du Canada (GRC), literally 'Royal Gendarmerie of Canada'; colloquially known as the Mounties, and internally as 'the Force') is both a federal and a national police force of Canada. The RCMP provides law enforcement at a federal level in Canada, and also on a contract basis to the three territories, eight of Canada's provinces (the RCMP does not provide provincial or municipal policing in either Ontario or Quebec), more than 190 municipalities, 184 aboriginal communities, and three international airports.[7]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Can ... ted_Police
Take British Columbia as an example of this. The RCMP is our provincial police force and is the municipal police force for most of the province's municipalities including much of the Vancouver area. When locals here refer to "Vancouver" we often mean the greater Vancouver area. Burnaby is immediately adjacent to Vancouver and no more separate from it, geographically than, say, Brooklyn and Queens are in New York. Much of greater Vancouver is that way. Vancouver, Burnaby, Port Moody, Coquitlam and New Westminster are all one contiguous geographical area. If you are driving through them there is no way to tell you have passed from one city to another. However all but Vancouver are policed by the RCMP.
There are RCMP divisions in Quebec and Ontario but they do not do local policing. They are there to do national policing functions that take place within Quebec's boundaries;
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Quebec, which is commonly referred to as “C” Division, plays a federal policing role in the Province of Quebec. Approximately 1,500 police officers, civilian members and public servants dedicate their efforts to a number of business lines, including financial integrity, national and border security, and organized crime enforcement. The RCMP in Quebec relies on dedicated resources to conduct investigations, provide VIP protective services and undertake crime prevention initiatives in communities in all areas of Quebec.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Royal ... _in_Quebec
So if we accept that Rob complained about me to the RCMP he didn't do it in Quebec, his home for almost the past year. So where did he do it? Not by driving over to Ontario. They would just refer him to the Sûreté and, as we all know, he has some policing issues in Ontario that would dissuade him going there. He could go east to one of the maritime provinces but they would have the same response as Ontario, go to your local police force.
As I've previously reported Rob has been living in an otherwise vacant house that was up for sale. It had recently been sold and I'd assumed he'd have to move out but still stay in Quebec. However without (I assume) free accommodations perhaps Quebec has no further attractions for him. So it's possible he's moved out of Quebec and returned to western Canada where there are at least some vestigial freeman communities he can attach to and he's still outside the reach of that pesky Toronto warrant. Winnipeg will have a guru vacancy after January 8th although Rob may not fit in there. They are used to a full-blooded leader who actually confronts authority and stays to fight through the courts, not someone who cuts and runs. Edmonton? Always a possibility. That's the heart of Canadian freemanism now and he's familiar with the city.
But what if Rob's decided to go way, way out west and return to Vancouver, the starting point for his excellent adventures of the past few years? What if he's here in Burnaby! As I said we're policed by the RCMP, maybe he's complained to them right on my home grounds. Maybe I'll see the Freedom Pickle in full regalia on Skytrain refusing to pay for his ticket! The possibilities are endless.