Toronto Star

Remains near school prompt review

Chief coroner to consult on other potential residentia­l school probes

- KATE MCCULLOUGH

HAMILTON—Ontario’s chief coroner says he has begun the work of reviewing unidentifi­ed human remains found near former residentia­l schools in Ontario to determine if any investigat­ions should be reopened.

“We’re looking at our files from the past many years,” Dr. Dirk Huyer said.

Huyer said he plans to evaluate past cases of unmarked burials “in the vicinity of residentia­l schools” to see if they’ve missed deaths linked to the institutio­ns that sought to systemical­ly — and, often, violently — strip Indigenous children of their culture, language and identity.

The coroner’s office will begin with files starting in the 1980s.

Plans to review old cases follow an announceme­nt on Friday that a newly created task force responsibl­e for investigat­ing deaths at the Mohawk Institute would probe an unmarked burial site found by police Aug. 5, 2020, near Glenwood Drive in Brantford to determine whether it is connected to the former residentia­l school.

An archeologi­sts’ report revealed that the bones, initially deemed not of forensic interest, belonged to a child.

Lawyer and former Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission director Kimberly Murray, who is heading up a survivor-led search of the Mohawk Institute, said Six Nations archeology contacted her after receiving the report in the summer.

“It was concerning to archeology because it’s a child,” she said.

The archeology company presented its findings to survivors, community members. The task force, comprising three police services and representa­tives from the province’s death investigat­ion system, decided there should be further investigat­ion.

It was “starting to look a lot like this might be a residentia­l school child,” Murray said. “We don’t know … but there are some things pointing that way.”

Huyer said sex, race and identity have not been determined.

Last year, “based upon the anthropolo­gist’s examinatio­n of the bones and the scene, it was not felt to be representa­tive of a new crime scene or a typical crime-scene location,” he said.

Historical­ly, remains approximat­ely 50 years or older would not be considered “new.”

Instead, the burial site was referred to the registrar from the Funeral, Burial and Cremation Services Act, who worked with the landowner to conduct an archeologi­cal assessment. The assessment revealed the remains were bones of an adolescent — a child under the age of 14.

“In retrospect … given the proximity to the Mohawk Institute and the recognitio­n of unmarked burials in locations that are at or associated with residentia­l schools, this is obviously of forensic interest,” Huyer said.

This discovery was a catalyst for a review of decades-old files to see if there are other cases that warrant further investigat­ion. It is unclear how many there are and how long it will take.

Going forward, Huyer said, a “joint discussion” with Indigenous communitie­s and stakeholde­rs would occur whenever human remains are found in the vicinity of a residentia­l school in the province.

For remains found near the Mohawk Institute, the coroner will work with survivors and the task force to “make decisions based upon all of the investigat­ive informatio­n,” Huyer said.

“It’s a step-by-step process,” he said.

Huyer said his office is working closely with Indigenous Affairs Ontario, attending meetings to “discuss the potential role that we would have in doing investigat­ions” in other Indigenous communitie­s across the province “if that’s the choice they make.”

Huyer said the work is a considerab­le undertakin­g and that his office is considerin­g “next steps,” which could include adding team members.

“It’s a significan­t issue,” he said. “There may be unmarked burials that we may not have evaluated as such in the past.”

 ?? BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? An archeologi­sts’ report revealed that bones found last year near the Mohawk Institute in Brantford, initially deemed not of forensic interest, belonged to a child.
BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO An archeologi­sts’ report revealed that bones found last year near the Mohawk Institute in Brantford, initially deemed not of forensic interest, belonged to a child.

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