Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

$16.5M settlement in G20 class-action lawsuit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Aug, 2020 08:52 PM
  • $16.5M settlement in G20 class-action lawsuit

A decade-long legal battle over mass arrests at the 2010 G20 summit in Toronto has come to a close after police and hundreds of protesters and others reached a $16.5 million settlement.

Lawyers representing those behind the class-action lawsuit said Monday the agreement comes after 10 years of court proceedings and negotiations with the Toronto Police Services Board.

Under the settlement, those arrested will each be entitled to compensation between $5,000 and $24,700, depending on their experiences, the lawyers said in a statement.

The deal also includes a public acknowledgment by police regarding the mass arrests and the conditions in which protestors where detained, as well as a commitment to changing how protests are policed in the future.

Those who were wrongfully arrested will also have their police records expunged, the lawyers said. The class action represented some 1,100 people who were arrested during the event.

Sherry Good, who launched the lawsuit in 2010, said the agreement "does bring about some justice," and she hopes the right to free expression will be better respected from now on.

"The terrifying way in which I and 400 others were suddenly and arbitrarily surrounded and held by riot police on a street corner for four hours in a freezing downpour changed forever the way I look at police, continues to give me chills," she said in a statement.

Thomas Taylor, who joined the lawsuit as another representative plaintiff, said the incident showed him "how very fragile civil liberties are for so many of us."

"For me and hundreds of others, being suddenly surrounded and held captive by frightening numbers of riot police when we had done nothing at all, going through violent and unlawful arrests, and then being thrown into a nightmare detention centre, was a stunning and horrifying experience," he said in a statement.

Toronto police said the force is "pleased to reach resolution" but did not otherwise comment on the agreement.

Canada's most populous city hosted the G20 summit of world leaders in June 2010.

Many public demonstrations were organized to address issues like climate change, globalization, and poverty. Thousands of protestors demonstrated peacefully, but some protests were accompanied by deliberate vandalism.

Police reacted by encircling large groups of hundreds of protestors in several locations in downtown Toronto with cordons of riot police, holding them for hours, and then transferring many of them to a temporary detention centre in the largest mass arrest in Canadian history.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs said Toronto Police Services objected to the class-action proceedings in court, and the suit wasn't certified as such until a police appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada was dismissed in November 2016.

The agreement must still be reviewed and approved by a judge, with a hearing scheduled for Oct. 19.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police say B.C. woman whose disappearance sparked wide search found dead in Burnaby

Police say B.C. woman whose disappearance sparked wide search found dead in Burnaby
The body of a missing British Columbia woman has been found two months after she disappeared. A statement from New Westminster police says the body believed to be that of Nirla Sharma was discovered Sunday along the Fraser River between New Westminster and Burnaby. The woman's disappearance from her New Westminster home sparked a major search in late February.

Police say B.C. woman whose disappearance sparked wide search found dead in Burnaby

PM Trudeau says nearly 10,000 businesses apply for wage subsidy in first hours

PM Trudeau says nearly 10,000 businesses apply for wage subsidy in first hours
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says nearly 10,000 businesses have applied for the federal government's wage-subsidy program to help them deal with the COVID-19 pandemic. The emergency measure will cover 75 per cent of wages for employers that have seen sharp declines in revenue since the novel coronavirus hit Canada hard in March, up to $847 per worker.    

PM Trudeau says nearly 10,000 businesses apply for wage subsidy in first hours

Man wanted for murder in B.C. extradited back to Canada say police

Man wanted for murder in B.C. extradited back to Canada say police
Police say a man wanted in connection with a first-degree murder charge in British Columbia has been extradited back to Canada. Sgt. Frank Jang of the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team in British Columbia says Brandon Teixeira arrived back on Canadian soil on Friday, after being held in custody in the United States since Dec. 1 following his arrest in Oroville, Calif.

Man wanted for murder in B.C. extradited back to Canada say police

COVID kills dozens more nursing home residents; emergency payouts top $22.4B

COVID kills dozens more nursing home residents; emergency payouts top $22.4B
Dozens more deaths in long-term care homes were reported Friday as new figures indicated the extent of the economic dislocation caused by isolation measures aimed at mitigating the spread of the highly contagious COVID-19 virus. The latest government figures showed more than seven million people had applied for the $2,000-a-month Canada Emergency Response Benefit, with the federal government having paid out $22.4 billion close to the amount budgeted.

COVID kills dozens more nursing home residents; emergency payouts top $22.4B

U.S. seals the deal on USMCA, says trade agreement can now take effect July 1

U.S. seals the deal on USMCA, says trade agreement can now take effect July 1
The United States has cleared the way for its long-awaited trade agreement with Canada and Mexico to go into effect July 1. The U.S. notified its North American trading partners today that it has finished the domestic housekeeping work called for in the agreement, a step the other two countries completed earlier this month.

U.S. seals the deal on USMCA, says trade agreement can now take effect July 1

Poultry plant in Coquitlam, B.C., closed by health authority over COVID-19

Poultry plant in Coquitlam, B.C., closed by health authority over COVID-19
A poultry processing plant in Coquitlam, B.C., has been closed by Fraser Health after an outbreak of COVID-19 among its workers. The health authority says two workers at the facility operated by Superior Poultry Processors Ltd. have tested positive for the virus and all employees have been screened.

Poultry plant in Coquitlam, B.C., closed by health authority over COVID-19