First Nations leaders from northwestern Ontario are calling for the Thunder Bay Police Service (TBPS) to be disbanded and pressing the province’s inspector general of policing to bring in an outside service to investigate recent deaths of Indigenous people.
Leaders from Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN) were at Queen’s Park in Toronto on Monday, joined by Kiiwetinoong MPP Sol Mamakwa other First Nations leaders and family members of Indigenous people who died recently in Thunder Bay.
“The Thunder Bay Police Service has turned into a cold case factory when it comes to investigations into the deaths of Indigenous Peoples,” NAN Grand Chief Alvin Fiddler said. “There is a complete lack of trust; everything has broken down.”
The call comes after Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) laid multiple charges against the former police chief and others linked to the force, in the wake of three recent deaths:
NAN represents 49 First Nations in Treaty 9 and Treaty 5 in northern Ontario, a land mass covering two-thirds of the province.
Numerous reports and expert panels have documented the Thunder Bay police’s failures to serve Indigenous people in the city and a 2018 report found systemic racism within the force.
“Please remember that these were individuals that were loved and that they meant a lot and their deaths shouldn’t have happened,” said NAN Deputy Grand Chief Anna Betty Achneepineskum. “It shouldn’t be deaths that are cast aside like they don’t matter.”
The TBPS is under renewed scrutiny after OPP laid multiple obstruction and breach of trust charges against former police chief Sylvie Hauth and ex-Thunder Bay police lawyer Holly Walbourne earlier this month. In December, OPP also charged Staff Sgt. Michael Dimini with assault, breach of trust and obstruction of justice.
Leaders from NAN were joined at Queen’s Park by:
- Kiiwetinoong MPP Sol Mamakwa.
- Anishinabek Nation Grand Council Chief Reg Niganobe.
- Bearskin Lake Chief Lefty Kamenawatamin.
- Family members of Ostberg, Moonias and Belesky.
- Julian Falconer, the lawyer for the Osberg, Moonias, Belesky and Debungee families.
In response, current police Chief Darcy Fleury said he and the new oversight board are working to move the service forward from the challenges it inherited from previous leadership.
This is the second time in recent years there has been a call from First Nations leaders to disband the TBPS.
Achneepineskum and other First Nations leaders in the region made a similar call in 2022. Shortly afterwards, the province appointed a board administrator to take over decision-making authority for the oversight board.
“I stood here in Queen’s Park and shared these same words, and we still have not seen any results from that,” Acheepineskum said Monday.
But this time, the complaint is going to Ryan Teschner, Ontario’s inspector general of policing, a new police oversight position created last year, explained lawyer Julian Falconer, who is representing the families in this matter.
Teschner is responsible for Ontario’s Inspectorate of Policing, an independent organization to monitor police and police board performance as well as promote improvements to public safety.
“He has the power [to disband the service], he has to — otherwise what’s the point of the quality control?” Falconer said. “This is the unfixable.”
Fiddler said he wants to spur conversations between the Ontario government, NAN community members and leadership on the future of policing in Thunder Bay.
“We want to ensure that the government hears us, the minister responsible for policing hears us, he reaches out to us and the families,” Fiddler said. “Our hope is that the government reaches out to us.”
But any combination of the OPP and a First Nations-led policing force would be preferable to the TBPS in the interim, Fiddler said.
“We need to have that conversation right away.”