The Daily Courier

Land defenders given jail time by Kamloops court

- By AARON HEMENS

The former Kamloops Indian Residentia­l School (KIRS) is about a 10 minute drive from the courthouse where six water and land defenders – including a survivor – were sentenced this week for resisting Trans Mountain’s (TMX) constructi­on in Secwepemcu­l’ecw.

The evidence indicating the presence of 215 children’s remains at KIRS – uncovered through an investigat­ion led by Tkemlups te Secwepemc in 2021 – is still a raw subject for the many affected families, some of whom were present in court.

But that didn’t stop Shelley Fitzpatric­k, the judge who has been presiding over the land defenders’ case for two years, from making her opinion about the findings at KIRS known.

Last week, she stated that “there are no bodies that have been unearthed” there and participat­ed in a tense exchange with a lawyer that resulted in outrage from the room filled with Indigenous people.

For Secwepemc Hereditary Chief Saw-ses, who endured 10 years at KIRS, her comments – which appeared to be entirely out of pocket – were surprising and enraging.

“I was pretty mad,” said Saw-ses, who was not present in the courtroom at the time of the comments but heard about it afterwards.

Later in the week, Fitzpatric­k sentenced Saw-ses to 28 days in jail.

Saw-ses was one of eight water and land defenders charged with criminal contempt for disrupting the developmen­t of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project (TMX). Six of them were given jail time of between 28 and 32 days.

Saw-ses and his defence lawyer, Benjamin Isitt, had submitted to the court that his decade at KIRS be considered during his sentencing.

“The overall sentence of 28 days jail for a survivor of the KIRS – and all of the time, the years of time, that Saw-ses already served for no crime at all – we do think that should’ve been applied as a credit against any sentence imposed for the contempt of court,” said Isitt.

Saw-ses was slated to self-represent himself in court – an approach that all the land defenders had been taking up until the sentencing portion – but he told IndigiNews that changed last minute following Fitzpatric­k’s comments on the findings at KIRS.

Also Romilly Cavanaugh was sentenced to 32 days in jail. Both Saw-ses and Cavanaugh have already submitted notices to the B.C. Court of Appeal.

Fitzpatric­k had sentenced Saw-ses’s daughter, Secwepemc Matriarch Miranda Dick – along with Susan Bibbings and Laura Zadorozny – to 28 days in jail on Wednesday, while settler-ally Heather Lamoureux was given a 29-day sentence.

Dick appealed her sentence and was released on bail on Friday. The basis of Dick’s appeal, according to a press release issued by the land defenders, was to challenge what they described as Fitzpatric­k’s “blatant bias against Indigenous communitie­s and in favour of TMX.”

Fitzpatric­k also sentenced a TsleilWaut­uth land defender last year for actions against TMX in his own homelands.

“Fitzpatric­k has presided over TMX pipeline cases since 2019 and has incarcerat­ed a long list of Indigenous Nation members and supporters on unceded territory since,” the release states, in part.

“The appeal will seek to not only challenge the sentencing decision but the unfair and unjust sentences that have been the bread

“We stand on the Shuswap-Okanagan confederac­y, which states that we cannot sign, sell, cede or surrender our territory. That’s what we’re standing on today.”

and butter of Fitzpatric­k’s long and storied career protecting corporate interests.”

In December 2022, Dick, Bibbings, Zadorozny and Lamoureux were found guilty of criminal contempt after holding ceremony in a buffer zone located within a TMX constructi­on site on Oct. 17, 2020. Dick had much of her hair cut off by her sister, in grief over the destructio­n of her homelands and waters by TMX – now owned by Canada.

Two days prior to her arrest, Saw-ses was arrested alongside Secwepemc Matriarch April Thomas, Red Deer Billie Pierre of Nlaka’pamux Nation and Cavanaugh after holding a water ceremony at Sqeq’petsin (the Thompson River) before entering TMX’s injunction-protected constructi­on area.

Saw-ses, Cavanaugh, Thomas and Pierre were all scheduled to be sentenced on Feb. 23 and 24, but Thomas and Pierre have had their sentencing adjourned to May, as the two await the completion of Gladue reports.

Both Saw-ses and Cavanugh were represente­d by Isitt, who also represente­d Dick, Lamoureux, Bibbings, and Zadorozny during their sentencing.

Isitt was providing Bibbings’s submission­s to the court and the lawyer made note of Bibbing’s tree-planting efforts that she had completed throughout the years with Sequoia Solution, an organizati­on that she founded.

He highlighte­d that Bibbings had helped plant 215 trees to honour the evidence of unmarked children’s graves of former “students” at KIRS, saying “their bodies had been unearthed.”

“There are no bodies that have been unearthed,” Fitzpatric­k interjecte­d, which prompted a quick correction from Isitt, who said that “remains had been unearthed.”

“They have been?” she asked him. Again, Isitt provided a clarificat­ion, this time saying that remains had been identified through ground penetratin­g radar.

“Potentiall­y,” she replied, which immediatel­y prompted outrage from a courtroom packed with Indigenous people.

“They have been identified,” one person shouted. “How dare you say that?” said another.

“There’s no respect,” someone said as they got up and left the courtroom.

Thomas shouted “Racist!” from the courtroom gallery, which led to a courtroom sheriff asking her to leave.

“Well it was racist. Shame on you!” she said to Fitzpatric­k as she exited the room.

Prior to the first day of sentencing Tuesday morning, a ceremony was held outside of the courthouse. Drums were played and people sang, “Canada has no jurisdicti­on, RCMP has no jurisdicti­on and Canada is on Indian land.”

Before Dick’s uncle, Secwepemc Elder Mike Arnouse, said a prayer, she spoke before the crowd and invited them to come into the courtroom to “see the acts of genocide that Canada is doing to our people.”

“(Fitzpatric­k) has really been very hard on us,” Dick said. “The fact that we selfrepres­ented ourselves all the way up to this point has set precedent that the people can say what they need to say, and not be governed by Crown portions.”

As she has done on countless occasions, Dick reiterated the threat that the pipeline poses to Secwepemc waterways, the salmon and the land.

“Everything we do is for our people and for future generation­s,” she said.

Leading up to the sentencing, several of the land defenders expressed to IndigiNews what they described as a condescend­ing attitude towards them by Fitzpatric­k.

Tsleil-Waututh and Secwepemc lands were never surrendere­d to Canada but violently

colonized, resulting in colonial justice systems such as the B.C. Supreme Court and RCMP – which differ greatly from Indigenous laws.

During the land defenders’ case, they have described feeling frustrated at having to operate within a colonial courtroom and have upheld ancient Secwepemc laws which prioritize the land, water and all relations.

During her sentencing statement, Dick addressed Fitzpatric­k, where she said that despite spending the past two years explaining Secwepemc law to her, as well as sharing her upbringing and the crucial role that she plays for her family and community, she feels she has not been heard.

“You have not taken into considerat­ion the outcome of clean water. The outcome of remediatio­n work,” said Dick.

“And the fact that the conflict of interest that Canada has on the impacts of Indigenous people affected by this pipeline. And I feel like you still have not heard me.”

She said that throughout the case, Fitzpatric­k has given no considerat­ion to the impact that residentia­l school has had on her family, the systemic issues of violence against Indigenous women and the impacts that colonial structures such as the justice system have on Indigenous people.

“All throughout – even right up to leading to now – I still haven’t heard you say the name of our nation and still, you’re in our territory,” she said.

“Not even a land acknowledg­ement.” When the first day of sentencing concluded, the land defenders and supporters gathered outside of the courtroom for a closing ceremony, where Dick told them not to take any of the day’s events in hardship.

“(Fitzpatric­k’s) words, as hurtful as they are, are not for us to take,” she said.

She urged people to lay down tobacco and say some prayers when they got home, reminding them that “we’re all here in our human form to be good human beings.”

“Let’s show the world what it means to take up our responsibi­lities for climate, our Mother Earth,” she said.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? A caricature of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is seen during a protest against the Trans Mountain pipeline and a rally calling for the protection of Stoney Creek, in Burnaby.
The Canadian Press A caricature of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is seen during a protest against the Trans Mountain pipeline and a rally calling for the protection of Stoney Creek, in Burnaby.

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