Emrah Bulatci, the man alleged to have killed an RCMP Mountie last week, appeared before a justice of the peace in Edmonton Saturday.

The 23-year-old was remanded in custody for six days while authorities take him back to the Northwest Territories, where he allegedly shot and killed RCMP Const. Christopher Worden in Hay River on Oct. 6.

Once Bulatci is returned, he's expected to make his first public court appearance.

RCMP also announced Saturday that charges were laid against Jarred Dale Nagle, 21, who is accused of being an accessory after the fact to murder.

On Friday, police in Edmonton arrested Bulatci, taking him into custody after a seven-hour standoff. He was on the run for nearly a week -- longer than he should have been, says a criminologist who was once a Mountie himself.

The University of Alberta's Bill Pitt says the RCMP should not have waited nearly two days before releasing Bulatci's picture to the public.

"We have to have a faster initial step because people are busting through these cordons and getting out in the general public and putting all of us at risk," Pitt told CTV News in Edmonton.

"Why not enlist the aid of the media?"

Pitt dismisses the idea that a suspect's privacy should prevent police from releasing information.

"I don't buy this privacy issue. That's garbage. That is absolutely nonsense. We're dealing with a homicide," he said.

But regardless of how the investigation initially started, CTV police analyst Chris Mathers says Bulatci's arrest appears to have gone down by the book.

Bulatci was arrested after police blocked off the area surrounding the residence Bulatci was staying at. CTV video shows they burst into the residence after blasting off stun grenades.

"This is standard procedure what you see on the video -- heavily armed tactical officers doing things in the safest way possible," security consultant Chris Mathers told CTV Newsnet on Saturday.

"And, although this may be surprising to your viewers, in an effort to apprehend the suspect without killing him."

On Friday, police in Edmonton corralled Bulatci, taking him into custody after a seven-hour standoff.

Before apprehending him, police fired stun grenades into the home.

CTV police analyst John Muise told Newsnet that stun grenades are common procedure.

"Part of the tool kit of a tactical team are stun grenades and flash grenades ... which make it difficult for a suspect to cope and manage," he said.

"The end result is they reduce the ability of someone liked to use force back against the police and it allows for a tactical takedown where the likelihood of violence is significantly reduced."

The fact that Bulatci's shirt was off could indicate he was overwhelmed by the smoke, Muise said.

"It sounds textbook. It sounds like it worked exactly the way they intended it to."

RCMP Cpl. Wayne Oakes told Newsnet that police took Bulatci for a medical examination after being arrested. From there, he would have been taken into police custody.

He wouldn't comment on whether police seized any weapons at the arrest scene.

Mathers said the death of an officer causes "concentric circles of loss" among other police.

"Those who have worked with this young man obviously feel it the most acutely," he said. "But anytime a police officer is killed in the line of duty, it affects all law enforcement officers -- both in Canada and internationally.

"Each officer that hears the news thinks that 'there but for the grace of God go I,' It has a very chilling effect on police officers," Mathers said.

Officers work around the clock on their own time when a fellow officer is killed, he said.

Worden, 30, died during an early-morning call to a notorious dwelling in Hay River, a community of about 3,600 located on the south shore of Great Slave Lake. He was alone at the time.

Worden's funeral will be held on Monday in Ottawa.  He leaves behind his wife Jodi and infant daughter Alexis.