The Peterborough Examiner

‘Systemic racism’ in Thunder Bay police

- COLIN PERKEL

Police investigat­ions into the deaths of nine Indigenous people in Thunder Bay were so problemati­c — in part because of systemic racism — that they should be reinvestig­ated, an independen­t review recommends.

The recommenda­tion by Ontario’s police watchdog is one of 44 in a report that concludes the city’s police service is rife with racist attitudes.

“The failure to conduct adequate investigat­ions and the premature conclusion­s drawn in these cases is, at least in part, attributab­le to racist attitudes and racial stereotypi­ng,” said the report released on Wednesday. “Officers repeatedly relied on generalize­d notions about how Indigenous people likely came to their deaths and acted, or refrained from acting, based on those biases.”

The 206-page report by the Office of the Independen­t Police Review Director calls the findings deeply troubling.

In a statement, Thunder Bay Police Chief Sylvie Hauth acAmong knowledged unspecifie­d “systemic barriers in policing” that must be addressed. However, she said the service needed time to study the report as it “continues to work towards bias-free policing.” The grand chief of the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, an organizati­on representi­ng First Nation communitie­s in northern Ontario, said he fully endorsed the report but called Hauth’s statement “disappoint­ing” for failing to acknowledg­e the racism findings.

“If you’re serious about addressing the issues that the report raises, you need to acknowledg­e them first,” Alvin Fiddler said in an interview. “On top of that list is systemic racism.”

The OIPRD began the probe of Thunder Bay’s police service in November 2016. The report finds the state of relations between police and First Nations to be one of crisis. In all, Director Gerry McNeilly’s team delved into 37 investigat­ions by police involving sudden Indigenous deaths going back to 2009. The probe also looked into the deaths of seven Indigenous youth that became the subject of a coroner’s inquest. its findings, the report, titled “Broken Trust,” concludes that police investigat­ors lacked experience in sudden death or homicide investigat­ions. In some cases, they didn’t even access autopsy results or understand them when they did. In all, the investigat­ions were frequently shoddy, the report finds.

“Investigat­ors failed to know what was in their own investigat­ive file, including supplement­ary occurrence reports filed by uniform patrol officers,” McNeilly writes. “Investigat­ors failed on an unacceptab­ly high number of occasions to treat or protect the deceased and his or her family equally and without discrimina­tion because the deceased was Indigenous.”

The director also recommends the possibilit­y of reinvestig­ating other deaths, including that of Stacy DeBungee, 41, of Rainy River First Nation, who was found dead on the banks of the McIntrye River in 2015. Within three hours of finding his body, the police service issued a statement saying the death “did not appear suspicious.” In an earlier finding released this year, McNeilly concluded the investigat­ion into the DeBungee death was grossly inadequate.

In their defence, the police service and its officers explained they were overworked and lacked training and resources. While partly sympatheti­c, McNeilly rejects the excuses. “These explanatio­ns cannot fully account for the failings we observed, given their nature and severity,” he says. “I find systemic racism exists in TBPS at an institutio­nal level.”

McNeilly, who stressed not all Thunder Bay officers are racist, traces the “broken” relationsh­ip between Indigenous people and police to colonialis­t policies and the fact that police have been used to implementi­ng the policies. The upshot, he says, is that a “crisis of trust” afflicting the relationsh­ip was palpable. Other recommenda­tions include increased staffing, and restructur­ing of the service’s main crime units on an urgent basis, enhanced case management, mandating name tags for officers to wear, and requiring officers to disclose potential evidence of police misconduct.

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