Edmonton Journal

Juries appear screened for Indigenous members

-

Senator Murray Sinclair, who chaired the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, echoed that sentiment this week, tweeting: “Without Indigenous people on the jury, how will they understand?”

Murphy said the case should serve as a “national wake up call” to the systemic exclusion of Indigenous people from the justice system. Greater efforts must be made, he said, to make it easier for Indigenous people who live in remote regions to get to court when they’re summoned for jury duty.

He also suggested that the use of peremptory challenges be removed altogether because “to challenge a person who is Indigenous because you think that he’s more likely to convict your white client does not serve the interests of justice.”

The suggestion is not new. In 1991, Sinclair led an inquiry into Aboriginal justice in Manitoba. The final report, which called the underrepre­sentation of Aboriginal people on juries “disturbing,” stated that the use of peremptory challenges “must be brought to a halt.”

“We question the logic and fairness of allowing the practice to continue when its applicatio­n can prevent Aboriginal people from sitting on a jury solely because they are Aboriginal.”

In a statement, federal Justice Minister Jody WilsonRayb­ould acknowledg­ed that “the underrepre­sentation of Indigenous jurors is an issue in several provinces and it is a reality I find concerning.”

However, peremptory challenges have always been part of the common law and the Canadian justice system, so legislativ­e reforms “would need to be carefully studied and considered.”

In a follow-up email, her communicat­ions director said Ontario Superior Court Justice Giovanna Toscano was granted a study leave last year to examine the issue.

“In conjunctio­n with the

I CAN ALREADY HEAR THE WATER COOLER TALK: ‘SHE WAS DRUNK, SO SHE HAD IT COMING.’

University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Common Law and the National Judicial Institute, she is examining whether our juries presently reflect a cross-section of Canadian society and observe Charter values, or whether juries under-represent, over-represent or marginaliz­e certain socio-cultural, racial or economic groups.”

The results of the study could be used to develop jury trial training for superior court judges.

“I’m not holding my breath,” said David Milward, a law professor at the University of Manitoba.

Meanwhile, at the highprofil­e trial of Raymond Cormier, the Manitoba man charged with second-degree murder in the death of Fontaine, a 15-year-old Anishinaab­e girl, concerns have been raised about biased media coverage.

Fontaine’s body was pulled from Winnipeg’s Red River in 2014. She had been living in a hotel while in government care at the time of her death.

At one point during the trial, a toxicologi­st, under questionin­g by Cormier’s defence lawyer, testified that drugs and alcohol had been found in Fontaine’s system. The way this testimony was reported by some media outlets infuriated Aboriginal groups, who accused them of “victim blaming.”

“Victim blaming and focusing on narratives that perpetuate damaging stereotype­s and myths about missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls serve no purpose but to harm victims, survivors, and their families as they try to begin their healing process,” the Native Women’s Associatio­n of Canada said in a statement. “Tina Fontaine is not on trial.”

Arlen Dumas, grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, wrote a letter accusing the media of sensationa­lism.

“I can already hear the water cooler talk: ‘She was drunk, so she had it coming. She was high and with a stranger what did she expect? Maybe if she wasn’t drunk and high, she’d still be alive.’”

Milward, who specialize­s in Aboriginal justice issues, said he understand­s why families might perceive the media coverage as victim blaming. That said, sometimes it’s important to get a full portrait of a victim — “not to blame, but to show how they are more vulnerable to running afoul of men who do certain things to women.”

Lisa Taylor, a journalism professor at Ryerson University, said journalist­s cannot sanitize the truth and “start shaping the narrative to what good people think ought to be discussed in court as opposed to letting people know what is discussed in court.”

That said, journalist­s could be more sensitive and exercise “a bit of humanity” when crafting headlines.

In an effort to get journalist­s to avoid writing “shallow” and “formulaic” stories about Indigenous people, the Native American Journalist­s Associatio­n last year issued a new tool for newsrooms in the form of a Bingo card.

Each tile represents what the associatio­n described as hackneyed themes in Indigenous coverage — such as “alcohol,” “poverty,” “addiction” and “violence.”

In its final report in 2015, the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission called on journalism schools to provide more education on Aboriginal history, residentia­l schools, treaties and rights.

Taylor said schools, including Ryerson, have responded by introducin­g lectures in their reporting courses that cover Indigenous people and issues. She said she has observed newsrooms putting out more enterprisi­ng stories that go beyond stereotype­s and caricature­s — stories that focus on “change makers” as opposed to “hapless victims.”

They’ve also adopted more inclusive hiring practices and are now engaging in partnershi­ps with Indigenous communitie­s to tell their stories.

“Non-Indigenous journalist­s often understand very little of the communitie­s they’re seeking to cover,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada