Send this page to someone via email

OTTAWA – RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson is sitting in the back corner of Nate’s Deli in the city’s southwest end, sipping one of several afternoon cups of coffee spiked with milk and a spoonful of sugar.

He wears an official white short-sleeved shirt but he’s taken off his jacket and hat – the one with the iconic yellow stripe.

The country’s top cop – who at 56 has three grown children and a seven-month-old son – arrived alone at his preferred spot for smoked meat and “real good fries,” not far from the Mounties’ national headquarters.

No assistant, no media handler, armed only – at least in the obvious sense – with a disarming smile. It’s one he deploys on various visitors, wanted or not, who stop by the table to say hello.

A three-decade veteran of the force who spent a majority of his career in British Columbia, Paulson makes it clear from the get-go he doesn’t want to get political.

Story continues below advertisement

He may be a cop at heart – but now he’s the boss. And with that comes a relationship with government.

“We need to have a subordinate relationship in some senses. Not in terms of our ability, who we’re going to investigate, but in terms of – we’re not a police state, last time I checked,” Paulson says.

“I have views, Bob has views, but they’re not the commissioner’s views, and if the commissioner starts weighing on issues that are of political nature, then he’s in the wrong business.”

He won’t talk about the Mike Duffy-Nigel Wright investigation – in particular, why Duffy was charged with bribery and Wright wasn’t.

“As soon as the court proceedings are done, the file will be wide open,” he says.

He even suggests a previous interview he did on the subject went too far. “I probably should have tempered that a little bit.”

READ MORE: RCMP Commissioner Paulson: ‘Shouldn’t be very long’ for Nigel Wright details

“What’s vitally important to me and the organization is that we not only be seen as independent and competent, but that we actually deliver independent and competent policing,” he adds.

“So it matters not really to me if it’s a breach of trust allegation, or a robbery charge, or a cultivating marijuana case – probably a bad example because it’s not important anymore…”

Story continues below advertisement

After the smoked meat sandwiches, we return to the subject of marijuana. Echoing the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, Paulson says ticketing, rather than charging for possessing small amounts of cannabis, is one of the options now being considered.

“I don’t think marijuana usage is as big a deal as it used to be. It’s still vulnerable to exploitation to organized crime, but you know, less and less as it becomes more and more commercially available,” he says. Tweet This

He’s more concerned with eradicating impaired driving – and that means setting court-accepted standards for limits on both alcohol and drugs.

While he takes pains to distance himself from policy-makers, Paulson can’t help but let his policing experience come through.

And with that, an opinion.

When he was in Vancouver, he tells me, he used to take his children through the Downtown Eastside – to show them what life as an addict was like.

“The people that use drugs are not the people we got to be bothering, right? We’ve got to be sort of helping them. Some of the best people I’ve ever run across in my policing experience: heroin addicts,” Paulson says.

“They’re sick. And you know they do crime, it’s sort of subsidiary, that if they’re doing crime it’s because they need to get heroin. And so they’re doing all sorts of property crime. But when you actually sit down and talk to heroin addicts, they’re really nice people.”

Story continues below advertisement

On harassment, and privacy

Paulson started in the job almost three years ago amidst what he calls “the troubles” – an ongoing controversy surrounding the culture of the national police force that dogged his days, at least the early ones.

“I entered the job with the harassment thing blowing the lid off the place,” he says. “It was like here’s the new commissioner, and then all we were talking about was that.”

He insists the problem has been dealt with, through a new leadership structure, and now exists only to the same degree as anywhere else.

“It’ll never be resolved,” he says.

“I don’t know when that’s over. I don’t know how we can say, we’re just like every other workplace now, we’ve got reliable systems in place that are delivering on these issues, so everybody take it easy, let’s all get our mind back to public safety issues and security issues.”

For Paulson, it isn’t just about sexual harassment – though he admits to “no shortage of horror stories” on that front, some of which he has characterized as “old news.”

“It’s more a…cultural issue around authority, around leadership and around accountability, and ultimately it was about a respectful workplace.”

Story continues below advertisement

Has it gotten better? “Unquestionably. It’s always been a good place to work, but there has been this sort of delayed transition into modernity.”

I ask him if he’s more looped in than his predecessors.

“Anticipating that previous commissioners may read your product here – I am,” he says.

“People will say to me when I’m asserting interest, ‘Commissioner, you getting in the weeds there a little bit?’ Well maybe, but they’re my weeds.” Tweet This

One pressing concern now is the issue of privacy. The Supreme Court ruled last June that police must get a search warrant before obtaining basic customer information from Internet service providers.

Paulson says since the ruling, companies have stopped giving information to the RCMP on demand.

“It makes our job impossible,” he says.

“There’s got to be a sweet spot in all of these discussions. Because privacy is absolutely vital, and you’d be amazed at how attentive we are to privacy, believe me.”

He said telecom companies would provide basic information in national security or child exploitation cases, for example, when police believe there may be wrongdoing but don’t have enough evidence for a warrant.

Story continues below advertisement

“Then what do you do? You can’t get a warrant, so ok, sorry nothing we can do. Come back when you got pictures.”

Still, he adds, “We have to respect the law.”

What has surprised him most in the job is “how much people count on you” in every facet of the $5-billion, 30,000-employee organization.

“I was surprised how much I matter,” he says.

“You are ultimately responsible for all of these things – and I am. It surprised me, the scope and scale of that.”

Paulson outside Nate’s Deli in Ottawa. Laura Stone/Global News

‘Promoted out of happiness’

He’ll always remember Catherine Pozzobon.

Story continues below advertisement

In 1978, 16-year-old Pozzobon was raped and murdered in a farmer’s field in Maple Ridge, B.C.

For 20 years, her killer remained free. Then, in the 1990s Paulson and a team of homicide investigators re-opened the file and DNA-tested (“we bled everybody in the file”) all of those originally questioned.

In 1998, police arrested the first suspect in the case, Andrew Larsen. He was found guilty of first-degree murder in 2001.

“You’re never going to bring Catherine back to her mother, but there was something that you did, right? You gave this family: who killed your daughter,” Paulson says.

“There was some guy that was walking around the planet, before we got there, thinking he got away with it. And now he’s in jail for the rest of his life.

“It was very gratifying. But I had to get promoted out of happiness.” Tweet This

Born in Lachute, Que. in 1959 to a French mother and English Father, Paulson always wanted to be a police officer. He says the RCMP appealed to him because of the variety of experiences he could have across the country, when compared to a city force.

He applied at 18 and was rejected for being too young. After 10 years in the air force, Paulson was admitted at 28.

Story continues below advertisement

Murder investigations captured his heart. “I love homicide work,” he says. “I’m kind of meticulous and systematic. I understand evidence.”

The reason for his success was simple: he was good at talking to people.

“You can’t be a good investigator unless you can sort of punch-in at all levels of people, so from high-falutin’ big complicated people, to run-of-the-mill easygoing people, to people on the street.”

His experience in B.C. also taught him to have modest expectations when it comes to combating crime.

“We’re never going to get rid of crooks,” he says. Tweet This

“When I was chasing bikers in B.C., my mission wasn’t get rid of the Hells Angels. It was just, catch a few of them, because no one was getting caught.”

Following nearly two decades out west, Paulson wound up in Ottawa in 2005 at national headquarters on a contract with aboriginal policing.

He didn’t see his career going anywhere – at one point, even shopping his resume around.

“I thought I was done,” he says. “Then something happened.”

He laughs giddily.

In 2010, a controversy surrounding the bullying-style of then-commissioner William Elliott – “shenanigans,” as Paulson calls it – engulfed the force. One of the deputy commissioners quit, and Paulson was promoted.

Story continues below advertisement

“Even then, I didn’t think I’d be a commissioner. I was lucky to have a job,” he says.

“When Elliot announced his retirement, I thought, what the hell?”

He insists he didn’t want the promotion until he was in the running. Now, he appears bolstered by what he calls a “very strong team.”

“Everybody trusts one another, we have good discussions,” he says. “It’s like running a normal national police force.”

And does he like it?

“Three out of five days, I like it. It used to be two out of five days. So it’s getting better,” he laughs.

Now re-married, Paulson credits his seven-month-old son, Finn, with keeping him grounded. “He doesn’t care about any of this,” he says.

He leans back with a smile and crosses his arms. “I’ve only been confused for his grandfather four times.”

Appointed in November 2011 with no end date, Paulson says he’d like to stay on until at least 2016.

“I have a few things I want to finish,” he says. “A five-year gig would be a good run.”

But he knows that ultimately, it’s not his choice.

Story continues below advertisement

“All things being equal, I could get my arse kicked out of here any day. Something goes bad – see ya.”