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FSIN, BATC leaders condemn Stanley verdict

The leadership of both the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations as well as Battlefords Agency Tribal Chiefs were swift in their condemnation of the verdict in the Gerald Stanley murder trial.
gerald stanley
A press conference was held at the BATC building in North Battleford where FSIN Chief Bobby Cameron said, "Gerald Stanley has not gotten away with this yet."

The leadership of both the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations as well as Battlefords Agency Tribal Chiefs were swift in their condemnation of the verdict in the Gerald Stanley murder trial.

“What would you do if that was your child?“ asked FSIN Chief Bobby Cameron after the verdict, in which Stanley was found not guilty of the second-degree murder of Colten Boushie in the RM of Glenside in 2016.

He made the comments at a late night news conference at BATC headquarters in North Battleford following the verdict. In particular, Cameron ridiculed the defence theory put forth in the trial that the shooting incident was an accident.

“What a bunch of garbage. Bill Burge as a Crown prosecutor dropped the ball,” said Cameron.

"He should never have been appointed. This is the racism that exists within the justice system, within the education, the economic development, the lands and waters and resources. The racism exists in all of those sectors.”

Boushie’s family members met with FSIN and BATC leaders following the verdict: the word from officials there was that the family was taking the verdict hard.

Boushie’s cousin Jade Tootoosis, his brother Jace Boushie, and his uncle Alvin Baptiste repeated their earlier denunciations of the verdict made outside the Battleford court house.

Jace expressed gratitude to those who lent their support to the family during the trial. “We couldn’t have done it without you,” he said.

Baptiste, however, remained upset and angry.

“The Indigenous people have been denied of justice today throughout Canada,” said Baptiste.

“Our people are not going to wait another 150 years. We want equality right now. We want justice.”

Baptiste called for an end to the prejudice and racism directed to Indigenous people from the justice system, the health system and universities.

"The Indigenous people will no longer be treated like third class citizens in their own country... Canada is Indian land — Indigenous land.”

“A lot of them can’t believe it, what came out as a verdict,” said a visibly emotional Chief Daniel Starchief of Mosquito First Nation, who spoke on behalf of all BATC bands including Red Pheasant reserve, of which Boushie was a band member.

“I can’t say no more — I’m so lost with words.”

Chief Kenny Moccasin of Saulteaux First Nation also said he was “lost for words. It breaks my heart.”

“Colten Boushie will never be back with us. But the verdict, I’m very disappointed.”

Lawyer Eleanore Sunchild, who was close to Boushie’s family and lent her support to them throughout the ordeal, expressed her outrage on the way the family was treated from the beginning.

“The way the mother was informed of her son’s death was with a parade of police vehicles barging into her house and doing a search,” said Sunchild.

She also denounced the arrests and interrogation of the Crown witnesses from the grey Ford Escape vehicle that wound up on the Stanley property.

“It’s been like they have been criminalized,” said Sunchild.

“This acquittal, it sends the message that it’s open season on Indigenous people. But it’s not. It’s not. The jury was wrong.”

Sunchild also denounced the composition of the jury, with the exclusion of all visible minorities from the panel.

She repeated something other Boushie supporters also said Friday night: that she hoped there would be an inquiry.

“I hope that the discussions that come from the federal minister and the Prime Minister lead to an inquiry that raise all of these injustices that this family has seen.”