(Wingham, North Huron, ON) There’s a point where silence stops being neutral.
There’s a point where “we’re looking into it” becomes we’re ignoring it.
And there’s a point where inaction isn’t just incompetence — it becomes complicity.
Welcome to Wingham in 2026.
Bullying Is a Crime
Let’s get something straight: bullying is a crime.
Harassment. Intimidation. Assault. These are not playground issues — they are criminal matters.
Yet in Wingham, victims are being treated like they don’t matter. Witnesses are being ignored. Calls are not returned. Statements are not taken.
And the message being sent is loud and clear:
If you’re powerful enough, you’re above the law.
The Falconer Incident — Ignored, Buried, and Fueling Public Rage
The February 17 incident involving Deputy Reeve Kevin Falconer should have triggered a full and immediate police response:
- Victims ready to give statements
- Witnesses willing to cooperate
- Video evidence circulating publicly
Instead?
Nothing.
No urgency.
No follow-up.
No accountability.
And this isn’t new.
Back in 2020, police refused to press charges in a prior incident involving Falconer. That decision didn’t de-escalate anything — it emboldened it.
When bad behavior goes unchecked, it doesn’t disappear.
It escalates.
The Real Damage: Hope Is Dying
This is bigger than one incident.
When police ignore victims, something far more dangerous happens:
People lose hope.
Hope that the system works.
Hope that someone will listen.
Hope that justice still exists.
And when hope dies, desperation takes its place.
A person who believes no one will help them…
A person who feels their abuser is untouchable…
A person who sees the law applied selectively…
That’s not just frustration.
That’s psychological pressure that can push people to the brink.
Even the strongest person can break under constant torment.
That’s how communities unravel.
That’s how good people get pushed into bad decisions.
That’s how hell on earth is created.
And right now, whether intentionally or not, the OPP is helping build it.
Ignoring Victims Is Not Policing — It’s Dereliction
The allegations are clear and disturbing:
- OPP refusing to return calls
- OPP refusing to attend Wingham to take statements
- Witnesses being ignored — even after coming forward
- Victims of the February 17 incident left without support
This isn’t a paperwork backlog.
This is a failure to act.
And when police fail to act, they are not just failing individuals — they are failing the rule of law itself.
The Public Must Act — Right Now
If the police won’t respond to victims, they need to respond to pressure.
Silence enables this.
Action stops it.
Contact Huron OPP Detachment Commander Laura Lee Brown and demand accountability:
- Demand that victim statements are taken
- Demand that witness statements are collected
- Demand transparency on the Falconer investigation
- Demand equal application of the law — no exceptions
Email: [email protected]
Final Word — This Ends When the Public Says It Ends
The OPP works for the public — not politicians, not insiders, not power.
If they won’t act on their own, they must be forced to act by the people they serve.
Because here’s the truth no one in authority wants to say out loud:
When police ignore victims, they protect abusers.
And when that continues long enough, communities don’t just lose faith in the system—
They lose faith in everything.
The question is simple:
Are people going to stay silent — or are they going to make the call?
