Edmonton Journal

RCMP discrimina­ted against Boushie's mother: watchdog

Family's suffering compounded by racist remarks

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

• RCMP officers showed up at the funeral of a slain Indigenous man, perpetrate­d racial discrimina­tion against the victim's mother and caused unnecessar­y suffering for his family over the course of their investigat­ion into his death, a police watchdog concluded in reports released Saturday.

The findings are detailed in two investigat­ions by the RCMP'S Civilian Review and Complaints Commission, which examined the probe into the death of Colten Boushie.

The 22-year-old Cree man from Red Pheasant First Nation was shot and killed in August 2016, while sitting in an SUV which had been driven onto the farm of Gerald Stanley near Biggar, Sask.

A jury acquitted Stanley of second-degree murder after he testified to having fired warning shots and saying his gun “just went off.”

Racial divisions flared in Saskatchew­an following Boushie's death, and concerns were raised about officers' treatment of his family and the integrity of their investigat­ion.

The commission issued a series of findings and recommenda­tions to address what it described as the “deficienci­es identified in the investigat­ion and interactio­ns with the family.”

The officers on the case acted with the “best of intentions” in ensuring public safety and laying charges in Boushie's death, RCMP said in a statement issued late Saturday, noting that it requested the outside review.

The commission conducted two reviews of the investigat­ion, one as a public interest investigat­ion and the other in response to a complaint by Boushie's uncle Alvin Baptiste.

In both cases, the watchdog said RCMP made missteps from its first interactio­n with the family, which was when officers informed Debbie Baptiste that her son had died.

It detailed how officers surrounded her home, didn't provide much informatio­n about what happened and proceeded to search her residence, sometimes in unlikely places.

One officer questioned Baptiste about whether she had been drinking, while someone also told her to “get it together.”

The commission also said at least one officer smelled her breath.

“Not only did the RCMP members' actions show little regard or compassion for Ms. Baptiste's distress and pain, they compounded her suffering by treating her as if she was lying,” reads the commission's public interest review.

It said one officer also checked a microwave where Baptiste told them she had placed her son's dinner.

“After spending the evening fearing that something had happened to her son and just seeing her worst fears realized, Ms. Baptiste saw her home encircled by a large number of armed police officers and had to endure this treatment from the RCMP members who remained in her home for about 20 minutes,” the commission wrote.

“She was then left with a lasting and painful memory of her interactio­ns with the RCMP, and few answers about what had happened to her son.”

In reviewing the complaint filed by the family, the commission found the Mounties' caused anguish to Boushie's relatives a day after the shooting by how it reported the incident to the public.

The report stemming from the family complaint, obtained by The Canadian Press, said Boushie didn't appear to leave the vehicle that drove onto Stanley's property or touch any of the farmer's belongings.

The commission, however, found the initial media release focused mostly on alleged property offences and failed to mention someone had been arrested for murder.

A few more releases were issued afterward clarifying details, which the watchdog said resulted in the public getting piecemeal informatio­n.

“The approach used by the RCMP could be seen to imply that Mr. Boushie's killing was somehow justified or “deserved” — a narrative that immediatel­y emerged on social media after the news of the death came out,“it said.

“This fuelled racial tensions on social media and in the community.”

The commission made 47 findings in its public interest review. Among them was the conclusion that two officers acted inappropri­ately when they attended Boushie's wake to update his relatives on the criminal investigat­ion, further damaging their already fraught relationsh­ip with the victim's family.

The report said officers started talking to Boushie's mother when they saw her outside the funeral hall, which she left after the opening of the casket.

“Allowing family members to have a few final hours of peace before their loved one is laid to rest would not have undermined the need to ensure that they be updated about the investigat­ion,” the commission said.

It also found RCMP didn't follow proper procedures to protect the SUV on Stanley's property, resulting in “the loss of trace and bloodstain evidence.”

In all, the commission made 17 recommenda­tions stemming from the public interest review, including that cultural awareness training be made mandatory for RCMP employees, which it found wasn't always the case.

The Mounties said Saturday that most of the commission's recommenda­tions have been completed and it expects all employees in Saskatchew­an to finish their cultural awareness training by April 1.

Meanwhile, the head of the National Police Federation, which represents 20,000 RCMP officers, questioned some aspects of the reports.

Brian Sauve said the commission made “broad-brush findings” about officers based on the historical and social context of the RCMP'S relationsh­ip with Indigenous peoples, and called into question the “expertise and methodolog­y” used to determine officers were discrimina­tory.

Sauve also noted that the commission found the police investigat­ion was generally profession­al and reasonable.

The watchdog said RCMP Commission­er Brenda Lucki accepted most of its recommenda­tions and conclusion­s, including the finding of discrimina­tion against Boushie's mother.

(OFFICERS IMPLIED THE) KILLING WAS ... `DESERVED.'

 ?? JASON FRANSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The death of Colten Boushie, a 22-year-old Indigenous man, on a Saskatchew­an farm in 2016 sparked protests.
JASON FRANSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The death of Colten Boushie, a 22-year-old Indigenous man, on a Saskatchew­an farm in 2016 sparked protests.

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