Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Police-linked Indigenous deaths spark grief, anger

Mayor of Ontario town urges calm

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The weekend police killing of a young man and the death of an ailing older woman after her arrest has sparked grief and anger among Indigenous people in Timmins, Ont., a northern city that is a hub for many First Nations activities.

Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, which represents nearly 50 Indigenous communitie­s in northern Ontario, expressed concern over the incidents but said it would be “premature” to make any assumption­s about the deaths of two people from the same remote First Nation community north of the city.

“It’s very troubling,” Fiddler said Wednesday in a brief interview from Timmins. “The families have a lot of questions.”

Timmins Mayor Steve Black urged calm pending the outcome of investigat­ions into the deaths. He stressed the police shooting was a rare event in the city, perhaps the first in decades.

“At a time like this, obviously, there’s a lot of sadness, a lot of mourning and a lot of frustratio­n in the community,” Black told The Canadian Press from his office.

In the first incident, police shot and killed Joey Knapayswee­t, 21, on Saturday. Details are scant but the province’s Special Investigat­ions Unit said officers responded midmorning to the Emergency Medical Services building and a man fled.

“There was an interactio­n between the man and officers and one of the officers discharged a firearm,” the unit said in a statement. “The man was struck. He was taken to hospital where he was later pronounced dead.”

The death of Agnes Sutherland, 62, also on the weekend, occurred after she had sought help at the Timmins District Hospital. According to the investigat­ions unit, Sutherland was asked to leave the facility and did so by taxi.

However, she was arrested after allegedly causing a disturbanc­e at a shelter. Police took her to the station and put her in a cell, the unit said in a statement. The same evening, officers called for an ambulance to take her to hospital, where she was pronounced dead on Sunday.

Knapayswee­t and Sutherland were from the remote James Bay community of Fort Albany — more than an hour’s flight from Timmins — where funerals for both were to take place.

Relatives were not immediatel­y available to talk about the deaths. However, Sutherland’s son, Glen Sutherland, told the Timmins Daily Press he was frustrated doctors allowed his “mentally unstable” mother, a survivor of the notorious St. Anne’s residentia­l school who needed a wheelchair to get around, to refuse dialysis treatments for her failing kidneys.

“We’ve been trying to get her help by a psychiatri­st,” Sutherland told the local newspaper. “We just didn’t know what to do, how to help our mom. We tried the best we can, whatever we knew how.”

Her frequent trips to the emergency room were a cry for help, he said, adding he couldn’t understand why doctors and police officers, who he said knew his mother by name, weren’t able to see the signs and get her help.

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