Toronto Star

Cops accused of sex assault

Aboriginal women in Val-d’Or say they were assaulted by Sureté du Québec officers

- ALLAN WOODS

MONTREAL— Quebec’s provincial police force has suspended eight officers accused of abuse of power and assault involving aboriginal women in the remote mining town of Vald’Or.

The allegation­s, which were publicized in a Radio-Canada report, involve women who were paid or forced to perform sexual acts to uniformed, on-duty Sureté du Québec officers — one allegedly inside a police station. Others told the Frenchlang­uage broadcaste­r they were harassed, beaten, or driven to the outskirts of the town in western Quebec and forced to walk home inebriated and in harsh winter conditions.

The Quebec government responded Friday by calling in an external police force to investigat­e the allegation­s. But the province has also made clear that it sees in this case further proof of the need for an inquiry into the fate of missing and murdered aboriginal women across Canada that the newly elected Liberal government of Justin Trudeau has promised to call.

“There is no way to see this other than as troubling and shocking,” said Quebec Public Safety Minister Lise Theriault, who fought back tears in a Quebec City news conference.

“The reality for the aboriginal women in Val-d’Or, but also all across Canada, is worrying and unacceptab­le. We have to act in collaborat­ion with all levels of government.”

A police spokesman, Capt. Guy Lapointe, said it began as an internal investigat­ion into the allegation­s against its officers in May when it was made aware of some of the alleged wrongdoing. The Radio-Canada report that aired Thursday contained additional incidents the SQ was not previously aware of, he said.

In a news conference, he said nine officers are the subject of 14 separate allegation­s. One of those officers, accused of two separate sexual assault allegation­s, is now deceased. Of the eight others, five are still working in Val-d’Or and three have since moved on to other postings in the province.

All eight have been placed on administra­tive leave while the investigat­ion is conducted by the Montreal police force. In addition, the SQ has brought in a new commanding officer to lead the 60 officers posted to the town of 32,000 people and instituted a working group that will focus on training officers in their interactio­ns with aboriginal­s.

“These are exceptiona­l measures for an exceptiona­l situation,” Lapointe said.

The allegation­s were uncovered while Radio-Canada’s investigat­ive news program, Enquête, was looking into the case of an aboriginal woman, Sindy Ruperthous­e, who had gone missing in 2014 and complaints that the police had not seriously investigat­ed her disappeara­nce.

A group of aboriginal women who knew Ruperthous­e told of their encounters with local police going back years. One young woman recounted being driven out to the woods and paid $200 by two police officers for oral sex.

“If they were two they would pay $200 each. It was $100 for the service and another $100 to keep my mouth shut,” she said, adding that she had had similar encounters with seven Sureté du Québec officers in total.

“Sometimes they paid me in cocaine, sometimes in cash. Sometimes it was both.”

Another recounted being caught in the street with a beer two decades ago and being taken into an interrogat­ion room in the police station. She said she was 19 years old.

“He pulled down his pants and that was that. After we went back downstairs and it was as if nothing had happened,” she said.

The owner of a local bar told Radio-Canada that she had seen more than a dozen aboriginal women mistreated and subject to physical and sexual abuse by police officers over the years.

A number of the women said they had filed complaints about their treatment at the hands of the police but never heard back about the results of any investigat­ion.

Chief Ghislain Picard of the Assembly of First Nations of Quebec-Labrador, said the provincial government should call a public inquiry to look at how the justice system treats First Nations in Quebec.

“Systematic discrimina­tion against First Nations exists. It is not an urban legend,” Picard said in a statement Friday. “The government of Quebec must respond to this culture of indifferen­ce when our members are the victims. It must stop.”

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Quebec Public Safety Minister Lise Theriault fought back tears in a news conference, saying the reality for Val-d’Or aboriginal women is “worrying.”
JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS Quebec Public Safety Minister Lise Theriault fought back tears in a news conference, saying the reality for Val-d’Or aboriginal women is “worrying.”

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