Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba aboriginal leader files lawsuit over teacher's social media comments

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jan, 2015 12:22 PM

    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba aboriginal leader's lawsuit against a high school teacher is alleging defamation against an entire race of people.

    Grand Chief Derek Nepinak of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs is suing Brad Badiuk, a technology teacher at Kelvin High School in Winnipeg, over comments posted on Badiuk's Facebook page.

    The comments, posted under Badiuk's account, accused First Nations people of being lazy and seeking free money from non-aboriginals. Some of the comments were directed specifically at Nepinak and suggested he wanted to "get his hands" on other people's money.

    A statement of claim filed on Nepinak's behalf Friday in Manitoba Court of Queen's Bench alleges the comments have hurt Nepinak's reputation and have defamed all aboriginals.

    "The entire statement ... was understood to mean that 'the white man/Europeans have been overly generous to aboriginal people and that members of the former group have done more than should be required of them," the lawsuit reads.

    "The libel against a race exposes aboriginal peoples to ridicule, hatred and contempt by encouraging non-aboriginal people to believe they are being taken advantage of."

    The statement of claim contains allegations that have not been proven in court. It seeks unspecified damages.

    Badiuk was placed on administrative leave last month after the Facebook comments came to light. His page was taken down and attempts to reach him have been unsuccessful.

    The Winnipeg School Division is still investigating and declined to comment Friday. The division, which is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit, said in December that part of its investigation would entail determining whether Badiuk himself had posted the comments.

    Nepinak's lawyer, Corey Shefman, said suing for libel against an entire race is unusual and is based on a section of the provincial Defamation Act.

    "As far as I can tell ... Manitoba appears to be the only jurisdiction in Canada that allows this sort of claim," Shefman said Friday.

    "As a representative of his people, elected to represent First Nations in Manitoba, Grand Chief Nepinak feels that it's appropriate that he brings this action."

    The Facebook comments were denounced on social media when they came to light.

    Murray Sinclair, head of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, wrote on his personal Facebook page that the comments were especially hurtful if they did come from a teacher.

    "Any aboriginal child in his classroom would know almost instantly that he does not like them or their family, or where they come from or their leaders, or their heroes or their sense of self," Sinclair said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hamilton man to face 4th trial in the 1981 murder of a young woman

    Hamilton man to face 4th trial in the 1981 murder of a young woman
    TORONTO — An Ontario man will be tried for a fourth time in September 2016 in the murder of a nursing assistant who was killed 33 years ago in the Hamilton area.

    Hamilton man to face 4th trial in the 1981 murder of a young woman

    Canadian shot by U.S. border guards after pointing gun is charged in Windsor, Ont

    Canadian shot by U.S. border guards after pointing gun is charged in Windsor, Ont
    DETROIT — A 22-year-old Canadian man who was shot by U.S. border guards after pointing what appeared to be a gun at them is facing weapons-related charges in Windsor, Ont.

    Canadian shot by U.S. border guards after pointing gun is charged in Windsor, Ont

    Heather Forsyth named Alberta Wildrose interim leader, party hopes to rebound

    Heather Forsyth named Alberta Wildrose interim leader, party hopes to rebound
    CALGARY — Alberta's Wildrose party has named an interim leader after Danielle Smith and eight other caucus members bolted to the governing Progressive Conservatives.

    Heather Forsyth named Alberta Wildrose interim leader, party hopes to rebound

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?
    TORONTO — Smoke it, toke it, vape it, eat it — marijuana, it seems, is going mainstream.

    Going to pot: As attitudes to marijuana mellow, could legalization be next?

    Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses

    Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses
    Maegan Richards asked a Vancouver provincial court judge to impose a conditional discharge for Allan Bosomworth, who was the co-owner of Two Chefs and a Table restaurant where he hid a camera in the coed washroom in December 2012.

    Vancouver Restaurant Owner Who Recorded Toilet Visits Thrilled With Secrets, Not Sexual Impulses

    Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them

    Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them
    An Egyptian-Canadian journalist who has spent the last year in a Cairo prison sounded the alarm about his network's approach to Egypt's precarious security situation months before he and his colleagues were arrested, documents obtained by The Canadian Press suggest.

    Imprisoned journalist warned Al Jazeera tactics could come back to 'bite' them