12 people arrested at Wet'suwet'en blockade want charges stayed due to police conduct - Action News
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Indigenous

12 people arrested at Wet'suwet'en blockade want charges stayed due to police conduct

Several people arrested when RCMP raided a blockade on Wet'suwet'en territory in November 2021 are asking to have their charges stayed, allegingthe police abused their power and used excessive force, according to court documents.

Applications go before the court March 8

RCMP officers dscatter on a snowy road.
RCMP officers on the Morice River Forest Service Road on Friday, Nov. 19, 2021. (Submitted by Dan Loan)

Several people arrested when RCMP raided a blockade on Wet'suwet'en territory in November 2021 are asking to have their charges stayed, allegingthe police abused their power and used excessive force, according to court documents.

Theywere charged with criminal contemptfor breaching an injunctionto stay away from a construction zonefor the multi-billion dollar Coastal GasLinkpipeline, whichWet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs say does not have consent to cross their territory,about 780 kilometres northeast of Vancouver.

Twelve peoplefiled proceedings Feb. 6 in B.C. Supreme Court to have charges stayed.

"The police conduct here was so egregious that the prosecution should come to an end," said Frances Mahon, the lawyer representing the 12 accused.

The B.C. ProsecutionService said it could not comment on the applications to stay proceedings because the matter is before the court.

RCMPsaid it would be inappropriate to comment on a court application.

None of the allegations have been proven in court.

Mahonsaidthe RCMP and private security firm that conductedthe raids "impaired the applicant's individual Charter rights" showing "systemic disregard for Indigenous rights and sovereignty."

The filing asks that if the criminal contempt charges aren't stayed that it would be appropriate to reduce the applicant's sentence based on the treatment of the accused by the police.

The stay applications will go before the court on March 8 in Smithers, B.C. to see if they will move forward, said Mahon.

An area map shows an orange line representing where the pipeline will go. A dar shaded area shows where it crosses Wet'suwet'en territory.
The Coastal GasLink natural gas pipeline would run from Dawson Creek to Kitimat, B.C., through traditional territory of the Wet'suwet'en. (Office of the Wet'suwet'en/CBC)

One of the applicants is Shaylynn Sampson, a Gitxsan woman with Wet'suwet'en family ties, who was arrested at gunpointin a tiny house on Gidimt'en territory for allegedly breaching the injunction, according to her stay application.

"I think it's important to know the extent of the harm that the RCMP caused while we were in custody," said Sampson.

Sampson said when she was in custody,cultural regalia of the land defenders were removed, racist comments were made to them by police comparing Indigenous women to monsters, and they were denied COVID-19 masks and food and water for up to eight hours while under arrest.

Conditions ofSampson's release allow her to enter an area called the "exclusion zone" on her traditional territory only for hunting, fishing, trapping and other cultural activities.

Sampson saidshe has PTSD from interactions with police since the arrest,and saidshe was threatened "multiple times" with arrest after going back to her territory.

"We continue to fight for the pipeline to not be built," she said.