The Hamilton Spectator

Indigenous woman shot by police laid to rest

Coroner’s inquest to be held into death in New Brunswick

-

EDMUNDSTON, N.B.—The young Indigenous woman who was shot and killed by police in Edmundston, N.B., last week was remembered Thursday as a kind soul who united family from both sides of the country.

A private funeral service for Chantel Moore, 26, was held in the New Brunswick community where she had moved three months ago to be near her mother and six-year-old daughter.

During the funeral, a picture of Moore sat atop her casket as firekeeper­s sang a healing song and family members consoled each other.

“We remember your gentle face and warm smile,” said Mary Martin, Moore’s grandmothe­r.

“You always had a kind word for everyone around you.”

Martin said Moore’s passing had left an enormous hole in their hearts.

“You will never be forgotten. You will always be remembered as the sweetest soul who now watches over us. No one will ever replace you,” she said.

On the same day the funeral took place, the province’s Department of Public Safety announced that a coroner’s inquest would be held into Moore’s death.

The coroner’s service website says an inquest in New Brunswick is a formal court proceeding that allows for public presentati­on of evidence relating to a death, but doesn’t make findings of legal responsibi­lity or assign blame.

However, coroner’s jurors can make recommenda­tions to help prevent deaths in similar circumstan­ces, which are forwarded to government department­s. Responses of the department­s are published in the coroner’s annual response.

The family has said it is devastated by Moore’s death, and wants answers from public officials on what occurred.

A dozen family members from British Columbia arrived earlier this week to support family in New Brunswick.

Members of the Wolastoqey people in New Brunswick expressed their sympathies at Thursday’s service and said a prayer to celebrate Moore’s life.

A paddle, which was a gift to the family, was placed near the casket as a show of the connection between family in British Columbia and New Brunswick.

Much of the ceremony was focused on healing, and a number of healing walks are planned for a number of communitie­s in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia on Saturday in memory of Moore.

According to her obituary, Moore leaves behind her parents Eugene Moore and Martha Martin, her six-year-old daughter Gracie, her brother Mike Martin, and sisters Courtney and Kaylee Martin.

Her death is being investigat­ed by Quebec’s independen­t police investigat­ion agency, the Bureau des enquêtes indépendan­tes.

Its findings on what occurred are provided to the public prosecutio­n service and the RCMP, but the agency says it doesn’t make recommenda­tions on whether to lay charges.

There have also been calls for a broader inquiry to examine systemic bias against Indigenous people in the province’s policing and criminal justice systems.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada