Regina Leader-Post

‘Two separate piles’: Saskatchew­an inquests allow Aboriginal jury pool

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A lawyer helping the family of Colten Boushie, the young Cree man shot and killed by a Saskatchew­an farmer, left a different courthouse this week with an idea about how Canada’s jury system could be improved.

Chris Murphy is part of a coroner’s inquest examining the death of Jordan Lafond, an Indigenous man who died following a police chase in Saskatoon.

Some provinces have fatality inquiries headed by provincial court judges. But others — including Saskatchew­an, Ontario and British Columbia — have coroner’s inquests with six-member juries.

In Saskatchew­an, if the deceased person is Indigenous, a coroner’s jury is often part Aboriginal, too.

“I felt that we had been engaged in a very fair process,” Murphy said.

“They had literally two separate piles from which names were randomly drawn and we alternated between Indigenous and nonIndigen­ous jurors,” he said of the Saskatoon inquest.

In January, Murphy watched as a jury with no visibly Indigenous members was selected for the murder trial of white farmer Gerald Stanley in the death of 22-yearold Boushie.

Of 45 potential jurors selected at random, five appeared to be Indigenous, Murphy said. Stanley’s lawyer rejected them through peremptory challenges, which can be made without giving a reason.

“I walked away ... firmly believing that the justice system has got to change,” Murphy said. “Allowing that process to happen is, in my view, state-sanctioned discrimina­tion.”

The jury found Stanley not guilty. Accusation­s of racism followed, as well as calls to end peremptory challenges and for more Indigenous representa­tion on juries.

Jordan Lafond, 21, whose death is the subject of the Saskatoon inquest, was in a stolen truck city police were chasing when it crashed. Police have said officers found Lafond under the truck, but he resisted arrest and an officer used a knee to subdue him. He later died in hospital.

Murphy is representi­ng Lafond’s family at the inquest. He said lawyers agreed that at least three of the jury’s six members should be Indigenous. They were able to ask potential jurors about whether they would be comfortabl­e on a jury, could come up with recommenda­tions and had any possible bias. The selected jurors were told to return to court when the inquest resumes in June.

Potential jurors are similarly questioned for inquests in other provinces, but qualifying them by race may be unique to Saskatchew­an.

The province amended legislatio­n in 1999 to allow its chief coroner to request a jury be “composed, wholly or in part, of people from a specific racial or cultural group.”

The Justice Ministry said in an email that the provision is commonly used and puts juries in a better position to understand the deceased person’s circumstan­ces.

Murphy said there’s no constituti­onal reason why the same approach couldn’t be used in criminal courts where an accused is supposed to be judged by peers. Indigenous people have high incarcerat­ion rates, but low representa­tion on juries.

Nicholas Stooshinof­f, president of the Saskatchew­an Trial Lawyers Associatio­n, said he believes Canada’s justice system is the finest in the world and doesn’t need an overhaul because of “knee-jerk” reactions to the Stanley verdict.

He said he recently met with Indigenous clients who live in the same area as Stanley and they agree with the acquittal.

“I have not seen any evidence or any indication that an all-FirstNatio­ns jury would not have come to the same conclusion,” Stooshinof­f said. “There is an assumption among some individual­s, politician­s included, that this man was acquitted because of racism on the part of the jury.

“I find that very disturbing. And it really does not do anything to enhance the quality of our judicial system.”

 ?? LIAM RICHARDS/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Chris Murphy is part of a coroner’s inquest examining the death of Jordan Lafond, an Indigenous man who died following a police chase in Saskatoon. He says Indigenous people have low representa­tion on juries and believes the Canadian jury system could be improved.
LIAM RICHARDS/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Chris Murphy is part of a coroner’s inquest examining the death of Jordan Lafond, an Indigenous man who died following a police chase in Saskatoon. He says Indigenous people have low representa­tion on juries and believes the Canadian jury system could be improved.

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