True and Fascinating Canadian History

RCMP

Vet of the Month: March, 2025

Robbery solved: A Team Effort

by J. J. Healy
RCMP Vets. Ottawa, ON

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This short story is a fascinating piece of RCMP history. The 1951 bank robbery in East Kildonan (near Winnipeg, MB) and the subsequent manhunt demonstrates the dangers faced by RCMP members during that era. The account highlights the quick thinking and coordination of the RCMP team, particularly their tactical flanking maneuver after RCMP Constable John Friend was shot, the remarkable survival of Friend whose injury could easily have been fatal, and the persistence of justice over time, with Zakopiac's eventual recapture in 1979 after his prison escape.

The case illustrates both the immediate dangers of police work and the long arc of criminal justice, spanning from the initial robbery in 1951 to the final recapture in 1979 - nearly three decades later.

On July 15th, 1951, two robbery suspects, John Zakopiac and Albert Proulx, held up a bank in East Kildonan and escaped with a doctor's new Oldsmobile. The brazen daylight robbery marked the beginning of a dangerous pursuit that would test the mettle of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).

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Two days later, according to a newspaper report two suspicious men were seen at a water tower at Vivian, east of Winnipeg in a bush area. Local residents reported the sighting, giving the RCMP their first lead since the robbery.

A search was launched comprising six RCMP members: Reg.#10175, Edmund Stanley, Reg.#15298, John Frederick Friend, Reg.#16073, John Robert Angus Clarkson, Reg.#16089, Harold 'Hal' Ramey, Reg.#17047, George Hector Annand, and Reg.#17296, Thomas McPherson Gardiner. The team coordinated their approach to the dense bush area where the suspects were believed to be hiding.

During the bush search, Constables Friend and Annand, in plain clothes, were surprised by the pair of suspects as they rounded a corner of a bush trail. They were suddenly under gunfire, with no time to take cover in the narrow pathway.

One shot took out the rear window of the police cruiser. The bullet went through Constable Friend's neck, exiting his cheek without even breaking a tooth, but knocking him out. It was a miraculous escape from what could have been a fatal injury.

Constable George Annand exited the cruiser and, unable to see the assailants, ran back down the trail, meeting the remainder of the posse. The team quickly reorganized their approach. Constables Ramey and Clarkson drove ahead quickly, followed by Constables Stanley and Gardiner, executing a tactical flanking maneuver.

In the following hail of gunfire, suspect Proulx was killed and Constable Stanley wounded suspect Zakopiac. The intense exchange ended with the threat neutralized and the surviving bank robber in custody. John Zakopiac was arrested and sentenced to 30 years for the bank robbery and the shootout with the RCMP. However, the story didn't end there. Zakopiac escaped from prison in 1955, managing to evade justice for nearly a quarter century before being recaptured in 1979.

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This compelling historical account showcases the danger and drama RCMP officers faced in the line of duty. The narrative highlights not only the courage of the RCMP members involved, but also the lengthy process of justice, spanning nearly three decades from the initial crime to the final recapture of the escaped convict.

All of the RCMP members who were involved in the manhunt are now deceased; Constable Edmund Stanley died in 1973 and was buried in Winnipeg, MB, Reg.#15298, John Frederick Friend retired as a Superintendent. He died in 2013, and was buried in Ottawa, ON. John Robert Angus Clarkson left the Force shortly after the robbery. He died in 2025, and was buried in Winnipeg, MB. Harold 'Hal' Ramey retired as an Inspector. He died in 2013 and it is believed that he was buried in Victoria, BC. George Hector Annand retired in 1974 as a Staff Sergeant. He died in 2024, and was buried in Ottawa, and Thomas McPherson Gardiner retired as a Superintendent. He died in 2024, and it is believed that he too was buried in Victoria, BC.

Photographs of the members known graves are illustrated below. They are remembered.

This historical account of the 1951 RCMP pursuit was researched by RCMP Veteran and Historian Jack White and it was revised by me. The narrative structure, grammar, and readability were enhanced with assistance from an AI language model (Claude 3.7 Sonnet, April 2025).

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Reporting from Fort Healy,


J. J. Healy
March 23rd, 2025



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