I am not claiming anything. You are putting words in my mouth. You should do more research other than Wikipedia.
Use of the word "you" was not directed at you personally. I could have used "somebody" instead in that sentence.
The difficulty in discussing this topic is there does not seem to be any Government tracking of police shootings at the National level and from the one study I will refer to in this post one gets the impression police forces in general are not particularly forthcoming when it comes to reporting much of anything but that comment is based on a very thin and quick assessment by me. See pages 12 - 15 regarding who provided information to the authors of the report quoted below. It could be the various forces publish data feely for the public. The cursory search by me may well have missed the reports.
Wiki may not be your first choice but the following seems to be a credible source for some information "Police Use of Force in Canada: A Review of Data, Expert Opinion, and the International Research Literature. The report is quite lengthily and anyone interested in reading it are free to do so. There are enough stats in the report to allow the reader to draw any amount of evidence to justify ones thoughts on the matter. But, Sir, you seemed to think my use of Wiki lessoned the value of the information when in fact whoever drew the information on police shootings that I quoted got the information likely from the same source or from the CBC, an organization that attempts to track police lethal shootings. I know we all have our views of the CBC but somoetimes the media is the only organization that attempts to keep a check on Government actions.
Readers of this post and thread might want to take a quick peak at the report I found. The information is there and you can draw your own conclusions. From 2000 to 2020 Alberta had only 95 incidents where police shot and killed their assailants. This is an average of 4.75 per year. One year there was none another 10. My conclusion is there are not that many. What might be of interest is the number of shootings per million has almost doubled across Canada over the period. Another stat that caught my eye was the fact American police are 3 times more likely to use deadly force than Canadian police based upon shootings per million population. (Pages 24-28).
Some agencies appear to be more energetic than others when it comes to replying to the authors of the report. In reporting physical integrations with the public. (Pages 29-31). In 2019 Calgary reported 939 incidents while Edmonton reported 3,926 . Either Calgary is a way more violent city or Edmonton Police are more violent them Calgary police or the two departments used different criteria. On a national basis Edmonton is the outlier. I am a skeptic. I doubt either stat means much and I certainly think either all the other police departments took the request seriously or Edmonton was more eager to get the stats out there.
For those interested in exploring this information the report I quoted seems to be the most academic as in objective I could find. There likely are others I just am not prepared to spend the time and energy to look further. I am and have been convinced the police forces in Canada do not reflect what goes on in the US or that there is any desire by our police to hurt the citizens they are charged to protect.
Take Care
Bo
PS It occurred to me the reported information by Edmonton might have been given at the same time they were looking for new pistols. Coincidence.......