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The family of a B.C. man fatally shot by RCMP is asking questions about the office that investigates police-involved deaths across the province, saying its very structure makes it “designed to fail.”

Peter de Groot was living on a homestead in southeastern B.C., when he was involved in a confrontation with RCMP in October 2014 and fled into the bush.

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The 45-year-old, described by his family as an accomplished scholar who had suffered a disabling brain aneurysm, was found in a cabin four days later and police have said he was shot and killed by an officer after he pointed a rifle at them.

A report released March 29 by the Independent Investigations Office concludes the officer’s actions were justified and charges are not warranted, but de Groot’s family says in a statement that many key issues remain unanswered.

They say the office carefully selected the evidence used in its report, that it was stymied by a lack of resources and received no co-operation from the RCMP officer who fired the fatal shot.