The Guardian (USA)

'Get it together': grieving Indigenous mother let down by Canada police, report finds

- Leyland Cecco in Toronto

Police in Canada told a grieving Indigenous mother to “get over it” after delivering news that her son had been killed, according to a scathing watchdog report that accused officers of discrimina­tion and inflaming racial tensions during their investigat­ion.

Colten Boushie, 22, was shot and killed in August 2016 after he and four friends drove on to a farm looking for help with their flat tyre. Nearly two years later, an all-white jury found Gerald Stanley, 56, not guilty of seconddegr­ee murder amid racial tensions in the Canadian prairies and deficienci­es in the justice system.

In a report released on Monday, the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission, which oversees the Royal Canadian Mounted police, found that police treated Boushie’s mother, Debbie Baptiste “with such insensitiv­ity that her treatment amounted to discrimina­tion”.

On the night of Boushie’s death, police officers armed with carbines surrounded Baptiste’s property before notifying her.

When they entered her trailer, officers asked Baptiste if she had been drinking, and then – after telling Baptiste that her son was dead – they told her to “get it together”.

The report also found that police failed to secure the scene of Boushie’s death, failed to secure radio communicat­ion records and unlawfully searched Baptiste’s property.

“I did not deserve to be treated the way I was treated,” said Baptiste during an emotional press conference following release of the report.

“Our family was never going to give up. We were not going to be swept away and treated as less than human beings.”

The report also said that police also inflamed existing racial tensions in the region through media releases about Boushie’s death.

While not inaccurate, the RCMP’s statements “could leave the impression that the young man’s death was ‘deserved’ or that possible property offences … were of more concern to police than the young man’s death”, the commission wrote.

“This narrative immediatel­y emerged on social media after news of the death came out, which fuelled racial tensions both on social media platforms and in the community.”

The CRCC also expressed “disappoint­ment and frustratio­n” after learning police had destroyed recordings and transcript­s of radio traffic between officers who responded the night of Boushie’s death. While records are typically destroyed after two years, police were nonetheles­s aware of an impending civilian investigat­ion.

Police also left the vehicle where Boushie was shot exposed to rain overnight.

“It … will never be known, what difference this evidence, as well as any other evidence lost as a result of the failure to protect the vehicle, could have had on the outcome of the case,” the commission wrote.

The National Police Federation, a union representi­ng frontline police officers challenged the report’s conclu

sion, saying that the report was biased against police.

The RCMP commission­er, Brenda Lucki, has accepted the findings of the report.

 ?? Photograph: Canadian Press/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Debbie Baptiste, the mother of Colten Boushie, holds up a picture of her son on the steps of the courthouse during the trial of Gerald Stanley on 5 February 2018.
Photograph: Canadian Press/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Debbie Baptiste, the mother of Colten Boushie, holds up a picture of her son on the steps of the courthouse during the trial of Gerald Stanley on 5 February 2018.

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