Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Kimberly Mack, First Nations Woman Alleges Illegal Search, Says Police Threatened To Seize Her Child

The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2015 01:20 PM
  • Kimberly Mack, First Nations Woman Alleges Illegal Search, Says Police Threatened To Seize Her Child
BELLA COOLA, B.C. — A First Nations woman from British Columbia's central coast is suing the province after two Mounties allegedly threatened to seize her three young children if she didn't let them search her vehicle for marijuana and crack cocaine.
 
Kimberly Mack will appear in provincial court in Bella Coola Thursday asking to be compensated $15,000 for what she alleges was an illegal search that failed to turn up any drugs.
 
"When I meet up with the cops now I feel a lot of anger," said Mack in an interview. "When I think they can get away with so much I feel angry towards them.
 
"I would just like an apology. That's my main thing."
 
RCMP Cpl. William Wallace, Const. Nick Jenkins and B.C.'s attorney general are named in the lawsuit.
 
A notice of civil claim states Mack was driving back to Bella Coola on May 28, 2010, with friends and family from a potlatch in Vancouver, when she parked outside a grocery store close to home for a washroom break.
 
Acting on an anonymous tip, police pulled alongside the vehicle and asked Mack for permission to search her vehicle, the notice states.
 
"They said, 'Kim, if you do not let us search your van we will get the (Ministry of Children and Family Development) involved. We'll get the dogs to search your van if you're not going to help us,'" said Mack in an interview. "I felt that I had to say yes to them."
 
The notice states the officers arrested Mack in front of her eight-, four-year-old and 15-month-old children and searched the entire van, even tearing off the vehicle's panelling.
 
"I was scared," she said, about the public search. "I felt embarrassed. Very embarrassed."
 
Mack said she later lost customers from her home-based convenience store and kept her eldest daughter out of school for a month, until life returned to normal.
 
"I didn't even want to walk into the grocery store," she added.
 
The RCMP and the province's Ministry of Justice and Attorney General said they couldn't comment because the case was before the court.
 
The ministry also referred questions to the federal Department of Justice because the RCMP was involved in the case.
 
Doug King, a Pivot Legal Society lawyer, is representing Mack and her co-plaintiff, Demi King.
 
He said they made a conscious decision to try the case in Bella Coola circuit court and not in a larger city, such as Vancouver.
 
"The heart of the case is about small communities — especially aboriginal communities — and how they're policed by the RCMP," he said. "This is really a case about a family that was totally innocent and had their life turned upside down."
 
The police allegedly didn't have a warrant, despite having ample time to secure one, said King.
 
Mack said she wasn't read her rights, either.
 
King said he hopes the case highlights the importance of legal mechanisms that keep police accountable.
 
He said the biggest issues in the case was the officers' threat to remove Mack's children, especially given the fraught history that exists between the state and aboriginal communities.
 
"A threat to take away somebody's children is not a minor threat," said King. "Historically, it's something that's happened and is a real part of people's lives in communities like this."
 
A date has not been set for the defendants to present their case, but that stage is expected to take place in Vancouver.

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec's Securities Regulator Investigating Ex-Bell Employee In Insider Trading Case

Quebec's Securities Regulator Investigating Ex-Bell Employee In Insider Trading Case
Quebec's securities regulator is investigating a former Bell employee for alleged insider trading related to several acquisitions the company made between 2012 and 2015.

Quebec's Securities Regulator Investigating Ex-Bell Employee In Insider Trading Case

Winds Could Whip Up Fire Activity In B.C., Washington State: Wildfire Service

Winds Could Whip Up Fire Activity In B.C., Washington State: Wildfire Service
Fire information officer Kevin Skrepnek says Grand Forks and Christina Lake residents could be asked to leave at a moment's notice if winds blow embers from the 195-square-kilometre Stickpin blaze across the border into B.C.

Winds Could Whip Up Fire Activity In B.C., Washington State: Wildfire Service

Several Items Of Interest In Murder Of Physics Student Found On Property: Police

Police investigating the murder of a Dalhousie University physics student in Halifax say they have found several items on a property outside the city they believe are linked to the homicide.

Several Items Of Interest In Murder Of Physics Student Found On Property: Police

Quebec Officials Investigating As Legionnaires' Disease Claims Two Lives

Quebec Officials Investigating As Legionnaires' Disease Claims Two Lives
BERTHIERVILLE, Que. — The provincial Health Department is investigating an outbreak of legionnaires' disease that has claimed two lives.

Quebec Officials Investigating As Legionnaires' Disease Claims Two Lives

Christine Elliott Resigns As Mpp For Whitby-oshawa After Losing Leadership Race

Christine Elliott Resigns As Mpp For Whitby-oshawa After Losing Leadership Race
The MPP for Whitby-Oshawa, who has not been seen around the legislature since losing the leadership race to former Barrie MP Patrick Brown last May, said in a brief statement that her decision to step down was not easy.

Christine Elliott Resigns As Mpp For Whitby-oshawa After Losing Leadership Race

Moosehead Worried Of Bootlegging Increase If Beer Import Rules Change

Moosehead Worried Of Bootlegging Increase If Beer Import Rules Change
"As brewers we have a responsibility to ensure our product is distributed in a socially responsible manner," said Patrick Oland Friday.

Moosehead Worried Of Bootlegging Increase If Beer Import Rules Change