OPP reinvestigating deaths of 13 Indigenous people in Thunder Bay, Ont., over 13-year period - Action News
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Thunder Bay

OPP reinvestigating deaths of 13 Indigenous people in Thunder Bay, Ont., over 13-year period

Ontario Provincial Police are reinvestigating the deaths of 13 Indigenous people between 2006 and 2019 in Thunder Bay, at the request of the attorney general."We believe victims'families, friends, communities and the public deserve to know what happened," an OPP spokesperson said in confirming the reinvestigations.

New investigations first recommended last year as part of Broken Trust report

An unmarked police vehicle parked on a dirt road.
Thunder Bay police officers are shown investigating a sudden death in May in the northwestern Ontario city. Ontario Provincial Police officers are now reinvestigating the deaths of 13 Indigenous people between 2006 and 2019. (Sarah Law/CBC)

Ontario Provincial Police are reinvestigating the deaths of 13 Indigenous people between 2006 and 2019 in Thunder Bay.

OPP spokesperson Bill Dickson confirmed Tuesday the independent reinvestigations are ongoing and have been undertaken at the request of the province'sattorney general. The cases were previously investigated by the Thunder Bay Police Service (TBPS)and, in a report last year, were identified as being in need of being investigated again.

These new investigationshave been assigned to OPP officers and are being led by a major case manager in the organization's criminal investigations branch.

"Our intention is to take a victim-centred, trauma and culturally informed approach to thoroughly investigate the circumstances leading to these 13 tragic deaths in Thunder Bay," Dickson said in a statement.

The reinvestigations may lead to new criminal charges, hesaid.

"We believe victims'families, friends, communities and the public deserve to know what happened."

Dickson declined to provide further details about which specific cases are being reinvestigated.

Anna Betty Achneepineskum, acting grand chief of Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN),said NAN has been advocating for the reinvestigations forthe past few years.

"It was recommended through the Broken Trust report, and it's been ... years since that report was unveiled," she said. "Ever since then, we've been pushing.

"And there's a lot more. There's others that also need to be reinvestigated, and we will continue to advocate for those as well."

Achneepineskum said she would like to see communication with the families of the deceased improved during the newly announced reinvestigations.

"The first reinvestigation process excluded the families," she said. "There was a lot of questions being asked by the family members, they weren't getting updates, there was very little communication.

"So, that particular process also failed the families."

Thunder Bay police Chief Darcy Fleury previously told CBC News he was open to any reinvestigations and would co-operate with them.

"If there are the shortcomings that have been reported, then definitely I'm open to having them reinvestigated," he said in an interview on March 22, shortly after his hiring was announced.

A spokesperson for the TBPS on Tuesday said the service was unable to provide a comment.

Coronerreview of 2 deaths also in confidential report

Tuesday's news comes just over a year after an investigative team looking into how the TBPSinvestigated sudden death cases recommended that 14 death cases be re-examined. The recommendations are containedin a confidential report leaked to media organizations, including CBC News.

The report also included one case recommended for a coroner's review ofa missing-person deathand another for a drug death.

It also found 25 unresolved missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls (MMIWG) cases from Thunder Bayshould be reviewed.

Thereport was part of the final work of the Broken Trust committee, formed after the province's oversight agency, the Office of the Independent Police Review Director, found evidence of systemic racism in the city's police force in 2018.

The committee called for the reinvestigation of the sudden deaths of nine Indigenous people. Part of the process was to consider if other sudden death investigations undertaken by Thunder Bay police should be conducted again.

Since that report, the police service and its oversight board have undergone significant turnover:Fleurywas hired as the new police chief and the oversight board has been under the control of aprovincially appointed administrator for the past year.