Regina Leader-Post

Anniversar­y of acquittal in death a day of action

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Andre Bear remembers pain building deep inside him as he digested news of a controvers­ial acquittal of a Saskatchew­an farmer who shot and killed a young Indigenous man.

“It really tore my world apart,” Bear said from his home in Saskatoon.

“It made me feel hopeless that I would never see justice in my lifetime as a young Indigenous man in this country.”

It sparked a change inside him, he said, and he decided to become a lawyer.

Gerald Stanley’s acquittal on Feb. 9, 2018 in the death of 22-year-old Colten Boushie prompted rallies and outrage across the country.

Bear, 25, is Cree and a member of the Canoe Lake First Nation. He was working toward an education degree at the University of Saskatchew­an as the trial was going on.

He’s now a law student at the university and the student representa­tive on the Indigenous Bar Associatio­n in Canada’s board of directors. He wants to spend his life challengin­g a system that he says needs to change if there is to be equal justice for everyone.

Jade Tootoosis, Boushie’s cousin, attended a conference hosted by the associatio­n last year. She urged the Indigenous legal community to make the second anniversar­y of Stanley’s acquittal a day of action to highlight the treatment of Aboriginal people in the courts.

The associatio­n is calling on students, faculty and allies to dedicate this Sunday to Boushie.

The National Indigenous Law Students Associatio­n has organized a demonstrat­ion beginning with a vigil at the University of Ottawa. Participan­ts will then walk to Parliament Hill and eventually to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Bear never met Boushie, but he grew up with the young man’s family members in North Battleford.

Court heard Boushie, who was a member of the Red Pheasant First Nation, and four other young people drove onto Stanley’s farm near Biggar in August 2016. Boushie’s friends testified they were looking for help with a flat tire.

Stanley told court he thought they were trying to steal an all-terrain vehicle and he accidental­ly shot Boushie in the back of the head.

Stanley was acquitted of second-degree murder. He later pleaded guilty to unsafe storage of an unrestrict­ed firearm and was fined $3,000. He has not talked

publicly since the court case.

Boushie’s family called for changes following the verdict, including the end of peremptory challenges, which allow lawyers to reject potential jurors without having to provide a reason. The challenges were criticized during the trial with suggestion­s that they excluded Indigenous people from the jury.

The federal government brought in legislatio­n that bans the challenges. However, an Ontario judge struck down the ban last November and similar decisions are expected to follow. Uncertaint­y remains about the ban’s longevity if it is brought in front of the Supreme Court of Canada.

Boushie’s family wanted a public inquiry, but Saskatchew­an’s justice minister rejected that. He said the trial showed what happened and an inquiry wouldn’t make a difference.

Bear said he believes the province’s response to the verdict, such as strengthen­ing trespassin­g laws, did not do anything to repair the fractured relationsh­ip between Indigenous and non-indigenous people.

 ?? LIAM RICHARDS/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Law student Andre Bear decided to become a lawyer after Gerald Stanley was acquitted in 22-year-old Colten Boushie’s death on Feb. 9, 2018. Sunday will mark two years since Stanley’s acquittal and there is a call to dedicate the day to Boushie.
LIAM RICHARDS/THE CANADIAN PRESS Law student Andre Bear decided to become a lawyer after Gerald Stanley was acquitted in 22-year-old Colten Boushie’s death on Feb. 9, 2018. Sunday will mark two years since Stanley’s acquittal and there is a call to dedicate the day to Boushie.

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