Heiltsuk man, granddaughter seek more discipline for Vancouver police officers who wrongfully handcuffed them - Action News
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British Columbia

Heiltsuk man, granddaughter seek more discipline for Vancouver police officers who wrongfully handcuffed them

A Heiltsuk man and his granddaughter are asking B.C.'s police complaintcommissioner to reopen discipline proceedings against two Vancouver police officers who wrongfully handcuffed them in 2019.

Maxwell Johnson says his family, people and culture were disrespected by officers' no-show at apology ceremony

An Indigenous man and a girl wearing Indigenous regalia speak into a microphone while looking down.
Maxwell Johnson and his granddaughter pictured in September 2022. The pair are asking B.C.'s police complaint commissioner to reconsider disciplinary action against two Vancouver police officers who wrongfully detained them in December 2019. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

A Heiltsuk man and his granddaughter are asking British Columbia's police complaintcommissioner to reopen discipline proceedings against two Vancouver police officers who wrongfully handcuffed them in 2019.

Maxwell Johnson and his then 12-year-old granddaughter were detainedoutside a Bank of Montreal branch in downtown Vancouver in December 2019after staff called police due to suspicions over their government-issued Indian status cards.

The handcuffing prompted immediate criticism of the Vancouver Police Department (VPD) and its treatment ofIndigenous people. It led to a human rights settlement with policeand a formal cultural apology ceremony in the Heiltsuk Nation in October 2022 which was attended by senior VPD leadership, but not arresting officersMitchel Tong and Canon Wong.

Johnson and his granddaughter are now applying to the Office of the Police ComplaintCommissioner (OPCC) to reconsider disciplinary proceedings against the officersand compel them to visit the nation for a second reparation ceremony in Bella Bella.

The OPCC had suspended Tong and Wong in April 2022and found the officers did not have reasonable grounds to handcuff the Johnsons.

"There is a hole in me right now,"Johnson says in the new application to the OPCC, dated Dec. 13.

"My family, my peopleand my culture are being disrespected and cast aside. If the constables don't come to Bella Bella and apologize in the proper way, the hole in me, and in our community, will stay there."

WATCH | Johnson says he takes officers' absence from apology ceremony 'very personally':

Maxwell Johnson speaks to officers' 'disheartening' decision to miss apology ceremony

2 years ago
Duration 0:56
Maxwell Johnson, who was wrongfully handcuffed by Vancouver police officers, says the arresting officers' decision not to attend an apology ceremony with the Heiltsuk Nation was deeply disappointing.

In a statement, the Heiltsuk Nation says the officers had told the OPCC they would attend the apology ceremony.

It says the fact they didn't show up constituted evidence that "the constables will not agree to a culturally appropriate apology without being ordered to on reconsideration."

"The Vancouver Police Board is supposed to be working with us to address systemic racism, but the ongoing failure of their constables to respect Heiltsuk legal traditions and culture, and to apologize in an appropriate way, is systemic racism in action," said Heiltsuk Elected Chief Marilyn Slett in the nation's statement.

At the time of the apology ceremony in October 2022, VPD Chief Const. Adam Palmer had told CBC News that the officers could not attend for personal reasons.

The new submissionsays the constables were ordered to providea written apology to the complainants, and did so.

It alsosays there was an offer to apologize in person,but the officers were not "compelled" to do so.

"The application is now before the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner. In order to protect the integrity of the OPCC's process, it would be inappropriate to comment," said Vancouver Police Board vice-chairFaye Wightman.

CBC News has contacted the OPCC for comment.

Nation cites UNDRIP in making case

As part of the settlement in the human rights case,the Vancouver Police Board formally admitted officers discriminated against Johnson and his granddaughter based on their Indigenous identities.

They also paid damages to the Johnson family and donated $100,000 to the Heiltsuk First Nation, as well as promised to hire ananti-Indigenous-racism officer, who was to look intocomplaints relating to Indigenous people.

The Heiltsuk Nation says in its statement they have attempted to arrange another apology ceremony, including by talking to Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim, who chairs the police board. It says those efforts have not paid off.

In the statement, the nation says policing agencies have an obligation to address systemic biases in policing under the province's Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Action Plan.

"When a member of the Heiltsuk Nation suffers harm and discrimination, it impacts the whole community," reads the statement.

"A Heiltsukapology ceremony, attended by the constables, would be a positive, uplifting and healing experience for everyone involved. It would be reconciliation in action."

Anyone can apply to the OPCC to reconsider previous disciplinary cases if new evidence is provided, under the provincial Police Act.

In this case, the new evidence is cited astwo affidavits,one fromJohnson and another fromSlett, which detail events that happened after the OPCC's sanction decision.

"The evidence demonstrates the constables represented their willingness to attend an in-person apology with the complainants to the discipline authority, but that their representation was either untrue or abandoned," the submissionreads.

"The disciplinary or corrective measures imposed based on that misrepresentation should therefore be reconsidered."

With files from Angela Sterritt and Chad Pawson