Homeowner tipped off to rcmp surveillance camera's on his property by the FlashRCMP cameras with crime photos found in trees16/11/2011 11:29:44 AMCBC NewsA B.C. man has seized two surveillance cameras he says RCMP had hidden in trees near his trailer home, and they are full of images from crime scenes and investigations.Dion Nordick of Grand Forks told CBC News on Tuesday he found the motion-activated cameras in June, in trees overlooking the trailer he rents. They are now in his lawyer's possession.Nordick said he took the cameras down, removed the memory cards inside, and found pictures of himself and his friends coming and going from his trailer among the 200 images on the cameras.There were also pictures of drug busts, suicides and assaults, "and it looked like they just hadn't been erased off the card," said Nordick.He said he saw a photo of a dead body and images of a woman who was the apparent victim of an assault."That corpse that I viewed is someone's loved one. Those pictures of that woman standing in her brassiere, covered in bruises - she probably had a hard time letting the police take those pictures. She probably had a hard time going to the police," said Nordick.The cameras even had pictures of police installing the devices in the trees.Flash gave cameras awayHe said he was alerted to the cameras because they used a flash when they were filming."I would say it's 100 per cent sloppy police work. It's Charlie Brown technique, I would say," said Nordick.---RCMP officer says: co-workers were more into catching overtime than catching a killerPickton Serial Killer investigators were indifferent, Mountie says23/11/2011 10:35:48 PMCBC NewsA high-profile Mountie who recently came forward with allegations of sexual harassment says investigators in the Robert Pickton case were more interested in claiming overtime and drinking than doing police work.Cpl. Catherine Galliford told CBC News earlier this month about abusive treatment inside the national police force, including sexual advances from several senior officers.Galliford was the RCMP's spokeswoman during the Robert Pickton investigation and is scheduled to speak at the ongoing inquiry into the case, and told CBC News some of what she will reveal at the inquiry.Galliford says she saw numerous problems inside the investigation, including investigators who were more interested in padding their paycheques and drinking alcohol than catching a serial killer."They would break between noon and 2 p.m. PT to just drink and party and go for lunch, but then they would go back to work on Friday and claim double-time," she said Wednesday.She says she learned after joining the force there was a lot of information pointing to Pickton, but couldn't understand why police weren't trying to obtain a search warrant for his farm, where the remains of women were eventually found.Galliford says there were internal squabbles and petty jealousies inside the task force, which was comprised of RCMP and Vancouver police officers.Becoming a targetShe says she became a target, and that at one point an officer from the Vancouver Police Department told her - in front of others - that he was writing a story about Pickton in his head."He said, 'I have a fantasy about the ending, and it's about Pickton escaping from jail, stripping you naked, stringing you from a meat hook and gutting you like a pig,'" Galliford said. "And they actually started laughing and fist-tapping each other."I cite fair use - fair dealings for any potentially copyrighted materialsTags: Flash photography Pic PIC Microcontroller Profile RCMP serial killer workplace harrassment sex offender rapists serial killers cop police policestate oversight