CBC Edition

Norval Morrisseau's nephew, among those charged in massive art fraud case, reaches resolution with elders

- Michelle Allan

One of the accused in the Norval Morrisseau art fraud ring case has reached a resolution with his com‐ munity.

Benjamin Morrisseau, Norval's nephew, appeared in court in Thunder Bay, Ont., on Thursday on forgery charges. After meeting with elders, an agreement was reached that will see him un‐ dertake reparation mea‐ sures, which can be part of the restorativ­e justice pro‐ cess.

"Restorativ­e justice princi‐ ples can include a focus on relationsh­ips, repairing harm, taking responsibi­lity, and tak‐ ing personal and family his‐ tory into account," according to the Ontario Crown Prose‐ cution Manual.

In the Morrisseau case, the details of what reparative measures could look like, and what they may mean in ter‐ ms of the charges he faced, are still unknown.

Norval Morrisseau was an Anishinaab­e artist from northweste­rn Ontario who died in 2007 at age 75. On‐ tario Provincial Police have said addressing the fraud ring involved the largest art fraud investigat­ion in Canadi‐ an history.

In total, police laid more than 40 charges against eight people in March 2023. The investigat­ion led to the seizure of more than 1,000 pieces of forged artwork.

Background of the case

Benjamin and two others were charged with knowingly making artwork falsely attrib‐ uted to Norval. The offences allegedly occurred between Jan., 1, 2002, and Dec. 31, 2015.

Gary Lamont pleaded guilty on Dec. 4 and has been sentenced to five years of in‐ carceratio­n on a forgery charge and a charge of de‐ frauding the public in an amount exceeding $5,000.

Lamont oversaw the pro‐ duction and distributi­on of hundreds of forged artworks falsely attributed to Norval Morrisseau starting in 2002, according to the agreed statement of facts submitted to the courts. Some of these forgeries were created by Benjamin, then signed with Norval's name.

All charges against Linda Tkachyk were withdrawn in December.

Court documents filed in proceeding­s against Lamont say Benjamin (also known as Benji) is a nephew of Norval. Benjamin, also an artist, paints in the Woodland style of art pioneered by Norval.

"Benji regarded Norval Morrisseau as a mentor and considers himself as one of Norval Morrisseau's appren‐ tices and a very similar artist to him," reads the agreed statement of facts.

Benjamin provided Lam‐ ont with unsigned paintings, the statement says.

"According to Benji, Lam‐ ont had promised to arrange an exhibition of Benji's art, which never occurred."

Remaining accused due in court in June

The three remaining accused are:

Jeffrey Gordon Cowan of Niagara-on-the-Lake. James (Jim) White of Es‐ sa Township. David P. Bremner of Locust Hill.

They are scheduled to ap‐ pear in a Barrie court in June for a pretrial.

Earlier Thursday, the province's court listings stated Morrisseau was scheduled to take a plea and three other co-accused were scheduled to appear.

CBC News has since learned that was a technical error and only Morrisseau was in court for the matter.

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