Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Kamloops Couple Says Court Actions Means They're Being 'Persecuted For Being Indian'

The Canadian Press , 14 Nov, 2014 03:31 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A First Nations couple facing poaching charges claim they are being “persecuted for being Indian.”
     
    Jay Coutts and Fara Palmer were in provincial court in Kamloops, B.C., on Thursday to fight the charges, saying their aboriginal rights are being violated.
     
    They have been charged with one count each of trafficking in wildlife, while Coutts faces an additional count of hunting during prohibited hours.
     
    Coutts told the court that his aboriginal rights trump Canada’s laws.
     
    “All the words in these laws are white-man words,” he said.
     
    “These are laws built for non-native people. It is for white people, not native people.”
     
    The couple say they have constitutional rights based on a number of prominent cases including a recent Supreme Court of Canada decision granting the Tsilhqot'in Nation near Williams Lake, B.C., title to 1,700 square miles of land in the remote Nemiah Valley.
     
    Coutts and Palmer were charged after an undercover operation by the B.C. Conservation Officer Service in April 2013.
     
    They’re accused of selling deer meat to undercover conservation officers in Cache Creek. It’s alleged the officers went to the house Coutts and Palmer were living in and bought meat.
     
    Outside court, Coutts said he was making a living selling the meat — something he believes he has the right to do.
     
    “I’m being persecuted for being Indian — for doing my job,” he said.
     
    “How is it possible that I can sell the hide, but I can’t sell the meat?”
     
    Coutts said aboriginals are allowed to hunt for food and sustenance in Canada and that should mean he’s allowed to sell deer meat.
     
    “My rights existed before 1800 and they still exist today,” he said.
     
    “To my society, it’s integral.”
     
    Coutts and Palmer are in the process of hiring a lawyer.
     
    They are due back in court for arraignment on Jan. 26. (Kamloops This Week)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Increases Distracted Driving Penalties, Get Ready For Higher Fines

    B.C. Increases Distracted Driving Penalties, Get Ready For Higher Fines
    Justice Minister Suzanne Anton says that effective Oct. 20, new laws will ensure motorists get three penalty points if they're caught talking on a mobile device while driving.

    B.C. Increases Distracted Driving Penalties, Get Ready For Higher Fines

    Police In Vancouver, Ottawa Want Help In Finding Boy Who Disappeared 5 Years Ago

    Police In Vancouver, Ottawa Want Help In Finding Boy Who Disappeared 5 Years Ago
    Police in Ottawa will be teaming up with the Vancouver Police Department to investigate a tip that a teenage boy who disappeared from the capital city five years ago today may be on the West Coast.  

    Police In Vancouver, Ottawa Want Help In Finding Boy Who Disappeared 5 Years Ago

    Masked Suspects Arrested In Victoria-area Home Invasion

    Masked Suspects Arrested In Victoria-area Home Invasion
    Charges of using a weapon and disguise during a robbery are being laid against three youth after a home invasion in Langford, B.C.

    Masked Suspects Arrested In Victoria-area Home Invasion

    Emily Carr's artistic works to star in exhibit in London next month

    Emily Carr's artistic works to star in exhibit in London next month
    VICTORIA - Emily Carr's brooding, post-impressionistic paintings of West Coast aboriginal villages and British Columbia's dark rain forests will soon appear in the same English art gallery that holds collections by masters like Rembrandt, Gainsborough and Rubens.

    Emily Carr's artistic works to star in exhibit in London next month

    Manitoba government says it's making progress on some inquest recommendations

    Manitoba government says it's making progress on some inquest recommendations
    WINNIPEG - The Manitoba government says it's making progress on an inquiry report into the murder of a five-year-old girl, but some of the recommendations may take years to implement.

    Manitoba government says it's making progress on some inquest recommendations

    German witness on the stand as Magnotta first-degree murder trial enters Day 7

    German witness on the stand as Magnotta first-degree murder trial enters Day 7
    MONTREAL - The jury in Luka Rocco Magnotta's first-degree murder trial is hearing from the man the accused stayed with after arriving in Berlin in 2012.

    German witness on the stand as Magnotta first-degree murder trial enters Day 7