Medicine Hat News

Remorse a factor in no hate speech charges after shooting of Colten Boushie: document

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

REGINA

A newly released document shows prosecutor­s in Saskatchew­an weighed backlash and remorse felt by people accused of posting hateful online messages after the high-profile shooting death of a young Cree man.

Tuesday marks the threeyear anniversar­y of the acquittal of Gerald Stanley in the death of 22-year-old Colten Boushie of Red Pheasant First Nation, after he and his friends drove onto Stanley’s farm near Biggar, Sask., in 2016.

Stanley’s trial heard from Boushie’s friends, who testified they had been looking for help with a flat tire. Stanley told court he thought they were trying to steal an all-terrain vehicle and his gun accidental­ly went off, firing a bullet into the back of Boushie’s head.

A jury found Stanley not guilty of second-degree murder.

Boushie’s death caused racial tensions in the province to flare and sparked debate on systemic racism toward Indigenous people and rural crime.

A deluge of online comments made after the shooting was the subject of a recently revised briefing note prepared for incoming Saskatchew­an Justice Minister Gord Wyant by the public prosecutio­ns branch. The partially-redacted document, dated last November, was released to The Canadian Press under Freedom of Informatio­n legislatio­n.

“Some people made comments online approving of the violence done to Mr. Boushie, and lamenting that more of his group had not been killed that day,” it reads.

“A number of people who made comments like this were themselves subjected to an online shaming campaign, which included potentiall­y threatenin­g messages.”

The prosecutio­ns office says it reviewed RCMP investigat­ions into the comments and didn’t recommend charges because there was no reasonable likelihood of conviction.

“Public Prosecutio­ns also considered the remorse of the suspects and the social media consequenc­es they had already received in determinin­g whether there was a public interest in pursuing charges,” the document says.

Chris Murphy, a lawyer for Boushie’s family, says he believes the comments fit the Criminal Code’s definition of hate speech towards an identifiab­le group.

He says he finds the rationale by the prosecutio­ns office troubling because of the message it sends.

“(It) suggests that you can say hateful things about Indigenous people in Saskatchew­an and you don’t have to fear reprisals from the police for those statements if you’ve been shamed online for saying them, which to me is frankly unbelievab­le.”

“I don’t ask this lightly, but I ask whether or not the public would believe that Indigenous people who are the subjects of criminal investigat­ions in Saskatchew­an are granted the same sort of leniency.”

Murphy also questions why neither Boushie’s family nor legal counsel were informed that some people accused of making the posts had expressed remorse.

RCMP spokesman Cpl. Rob King says about 85 online accounts were investigat­ed for comments made about Boushie’s death and the

Stanley trial. Officers informed those who made reports about the outcomes of the investigat­ions, King says, and Boushie’s family didn’t file complaints.

Kelly Sundberg, a criminolog­ist at Mount Royal University, says collecting evidence in online hate cases is complex and often crosses jurisdicti­ons.

“There’s so many challenges of just showing that, that computer was used by a certain person on this time and that we know it’s the only person possibly behind that keyboard.”

Another expert says hate speech is a tough crime to prosecute because it requires drawing a line between freedom of expression and words that normalize hate or violence toward members of a specific group.

“At minimum, any expression of remorse would have to be publicly made and made to those who were the victims,” says University of Windsor law professor Richard Moon, adding that could be to Boushie’s family or the wider

Indigenous community.

Saskatchew­an’s Ministry of Justice says it doesn’t comment on the details of investigat­ions where no charges are laid and the RCMP says it is bound by privacy laws.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Debbie Baptiste, mother of Colten Boushie, holds up a picture of her son as she leaves the Court of Queen’s Bench during a lunch recess on the fifth day of the trial of Gerald Stanley, the farmer accused of killing the 22-year-old Indigenous man, in Battleford on Feb. 5, 2018.
CP FILE PHOTO Debbie Baptiste, mother of Colten Boushie, holds up a picture of her son as she leaves the Court of Queen’s Bench during a lunch recess on the fifth day of the trial of Gerald Stanley, the farmer accused of killing the 22-year-old Indigenous man, in Battleford on Feb. 5, 2018.

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