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Manitoba

Families impacted by police violence in Winnipeg call for reform

A group representing families impacted by police violence in Winnipeg is calling on the Manitoba government to overhaul to the way complaints against police are handled in the province.

'This is about an entire system that has been failing us for generations': father of man who died in January

People sitting looking toward a woman holding a mic. An orange flag is hanging over the rafters of the indoor building, with the words 'Every Child Matters'
Dozens attended a community meeting hosted by the Coalition of Families Affected by Police Violence Saturday afternoon. (Arturo Chang/CBC)

A group representing families impacted by police violence in Winnipeg is calling on the Manitoba government tooverhaul to the way complaints against police are handled in the province.

Dozens attended a community meeting hosted by the Coalition of Families Affected by Police Violence Saturday afternoon.

The group, made up of family members and their supporters,is calling on the province to address systemic racism in the Winnipeg Police Service, which it says has been a known problem for decades.

"This is not about one bad officer," Brian Wood told the crowd. "This is about an entire system that has been failing us for generations. Today, I'm calling for action, not sympathy."

He is the father of JamesWood, whodied in late January after being restrained by police responding to a call about an intoxicated man at an apartment complex in Winnipeg's Crestview neighbourhood.

A man standing in front of an illustration which has the words 'consensual decolonization'
Brian Wood, the father of James Wood, said there was 'no justification' for the death of his son. (Ron Dhaliwal/CBC)

Several witnesses told CBC News police used excessive force in the encounter, beating the 35-year-old with a baton and Tasering him.

A probe into his death by the province's police watchdog,the Independent InvestigationUnit,is still ongoing.

"There is no justification formy son to lose his life due to police conduct," Brian Wood told CBC on Saturday.

"We're not anti-police.[But] the Indigenous and visible minority deaths that's been happening in Winnipeg that needs to stop."

Open letter to premier, justice minister

An open letteraddressed to Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew and Justice Minister Matt Wiebe, posted online by the Coalition of Families Affected by Police Violence earlier in the week, had gathered more than a hundred signatures by Saturday.

"This issue requires immediate attention and redress in Winnipeg," the letter reads, mentioning a recent series of incidents across Canada in which sixFirst Nations were killed by police.

The deaths which happened within a 15-day span include Tammy Bateman, whowas struck by a police cruiser inWinnipeg's Fort Rouge Park on Sept. 5.

Two people kneel down in front of a framed photo of a man's face.
A memorial to James Wood is seen near the area where his fatal encounter with police took place last January. His father is part of a group calling on the province to address systemic racism in the Winnipeg Police Service, which it says has been a known problem for decades. (Submitted by Hilda Anderson-Pyrz)

Among the signatories to the open letter are several legal scholars and leaders fromsomeFirst Nation communities, as well as the relatives of Adrian Lacquette.

Adrian Lacquette was fatally shot by Winnipeg police in 2017, whenhe pointed a gun atpolice after he'd gotten out of a stolen SUV.

The 23-year-old suffered at least nine gunshot wounds. It was later determined he'd been carrying a replica firearm, and was under the influence of cocaine, oxycodone and alcohol.

The Independent Investigation Unit ruled the shooting "justified and unavoidable" in 2018.

'A systemic issue'

In Manitoba,individuals can file acomplaint about the conduct of a municipal police officer to the Law Enforcement Review Agency, or LERA.

But the coalition is calling on the province to create abody that can investigate public complaints about the system as a whole, not just complaintsabout individual officers.

"This sort of thing exists in other provinces and we believe that it must exist here," saidMeaghan Daniel, the coalition's legal counsel.

"It comes down to the fact that systemic racism can only be addressed a systemic issue with a systemic scope,procedure to make systemic remedies."

Danielrepresented the family of Ashley Smith at the inquest looking into thedeath of the Indigenous teen at an Ontario prison in 2007, as well as the Nishnawbe Aski Nation in an inquest into the deaths of seven First Nations youth in Thunder Bay, Ont.

During Saturday's meeting, the lawyer said that instead of asking for further "one-off" inquiries into police-related deaths, the coalition hopes to create an ongoing strategic path for police oversight.

"What we're asking for is actually quite simple," she told CBC News.

"We just need the power to look at the problem where it exists, ratherthan getting distracted with these one-off discipline processes."

New police chief could make 'desperately needed' changes

The group is also looking for reforms to the Fatal Inquiries Act, to ensure the inquiriesprovide meaningful recommendations, saying the current inquest system for state-involved deaths is not fulfilling its purpose of preventing future incidents.

CBC News has reached out to the province for comment.

A set of illustrations, some showing police vehicles, on display on top of some chairs.
The coalition is calling on the province to create abody that can investigate public complaints about the system as a whole, not just complaintsabout individual officers. (Arturo Chang/CBC)

The meeting comes as the city is looking for a new police chief to replaceDanny Smyth, who officially retired earlier this month.

Hilda Anderson-Pyrz, a community advocate and James Wood's aunt,said the relationship between Indigenous people andpolice has soured in recentyears, and the next chief shouldn't be afraid to make the systemic changes that "are desperately needed."

"There's a big fear within the Indigenous community of policing," she said."It's real,because we see the outcomes repeatedly. There has to be transformative change."

Two members of the Winnipeg police board Diane Redsky and Damon Johnston also attended the meeting Saturday.