Times Colonist

‘It’s impossible to find peace:’ Spouse wants to view report on probe of police shooting death

- EMMA TRANTER

IQALUIT — The spouse of a Nunavut man shot and killed by RCMP last year says she wants to see the report on the investigat­ion into his death.

The Ottawa Police Service issued a statemen this month on its independen­t investigat­ion into the shooting, which found the officers involved not criminally responsibl­e for Abraham Natanine’s death.

Natanine, 31, was shot after two officers responded to a domestic disturbanc­e at his home in Clyde River on the night of May 5, RCMP said.

Michelle Illauq, Natanine’s spouse and the mother of his two children, was there that night.

In a statement through her lawyer, Qajaq Robinson, Illauq said she remembers the situation differentl­y than the RCMP.

“What they said happened isn’t what I remember,” she said in the statement, which didn’t provide any details about the night.

Illauq said she also has not seen the investigat­ion’s report and only found out about its conclusion through the news.

“I want to see the reports and the statements. When they killed him, it shattered so many lives,” she said. “It’s impossible to find peace without answers.”

Nunavut Mounties have given few details on the circumstan­ces around Natanine’s death. A release from the RCMP issued a week after the statement from Ottawa police said the situation “escalated” when Natanine went to retrieve a weapon, but the RCMP has not said what that weapon was.

Nunavut RCMP currently has an agreement with Ottawa and Calgary police to investigat­e serious incidents involving officers. That agreement does not require their reports to be made public.

“We’re continuing to pursue access to the reports,” Robinson said.

Since Jan. 1, 2020, there have been six serious encounters involving police in Nunavut, including the shooting deaths of Natanine and Attachie Ashoona in the hamlet of Kinngait.

Earlier this year, Ottawa police cleared the officer who shot and killed Ashoona as well as the officer who knocked down a Kinngait man with a truck door during an arrest.

Nunavut RCMP said they won’t comment further on Natinine’s shooting because they anticipate there may be other reviews.

In December, Nunavut’s justice minister introduced a bill that would open the door for civilian oversight of RCMP in Nunavut. The bill, as it stands, still leaves the option open for police forces to conduct thirdparty investigat­ions.

The bill has passed second reading and is being reviewed by Nunavut’s standing committee on legislatio­n.

 ?? MICHELLE ILLAUQM. VIA CP ?? Abraham Natanine is shown with his daughter in Clyde River, Nunavut. Natanine was shot and killed by police in May 2020 at the age of 31.
MICHELLE ILLAUQM. VIA CP Abraham Natanine is shown with his daughter in Clyde River, Nunavut. Natanine was shot and killed by police in May 2020 at the age of 31.

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