Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rights complaints filed over bank's fraud claims

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2020 11:37 PM
  • Rights complaints filed over bank's fraud claims

An Indigenous man from British Columbia has filed complaints with the BC Human Rights Tribunal and the Canadian Human Rights Commission after he and his granddaughter were handcuffed when they tried to open a bank account.

Maxwell Johnson's complaint says both he and his 12-year-old granddaughter were detained last December by Vancouver police officers when they tried to open an account at the Bank of Montreal using their Indigenous status cards.

His complaint alleges that the bank called 911 over an identification issue because they are Indigenous, while it accuses the police of racial profiling that led to their detention and the use of handcuffs.

Johnson released details of the human rights complaint in a news release issued on the website of the Heiltsuk First Nation. He and his granddaughter are members of the First Nation in Bella Bella.

He said in an interview on Monday that the incident has led to a resurgence in his panic and anxiety attacks.

"It's affected me quite a bit," Johnson said. "When this happened to us, my anxiety just went through the roof. I started counselling again. It's affected my motivation, my thought process, quite a bit of stuff."

Johnson is seeking compensation and wants a public apology from the Vancouver Police Board, the police department and the bank.

Const. Tania Visintin of the Vancouver Police Department said in a statement that the circumstances are regrettable and that the actions of the responding officers are being investigated by the Office of Police Complaints Commissioner.

The department is also reviewing its policy for future situations with a report to be submitted to the police board, she said.

The Bank of Montreal could not be immediately reached for comment, but it has previously apologized for how the incident was handled, saying that it "does not reflect us at our best."

Johnson questioned the actions of police, particularly why officers placed him and his granddaughter in handcuffs if they were only being detained.

"It was so hard when we were detained. We had to prove who we were and where we came from," he said. "It gets so tiring trying to prove who you are as a First Nations person."

Marilyn Slett, the chief councillor of the Heiltsuk First Nation, said her community wants to see changes in the way the Bank of Montreal and the Vancouver Police Department handle Indigenous issues.

"We're a long ways away from reconciliation when these types of things happen to our people when they're trying to open up a bank account," she said in an interview.

MORE National ARTICLES

TSB report finds ships may be outgrowing ports

TSB report finds ships may be outgrowing ports
The safety board issues the caution in its report into a January 2019 incident where the container vessel Ever Summit hit a crane while being piloted into the Vanterm terminal in the Port of Vancouver.

TSB report finds ships may be outgrowing ports

South Asian yoga studio owner and conspiracy theorist breaks quarantine act

South Asian yoga studio owner and conspiracy theorist breaks quarantine act
Mak Parhar owner of Bikram Yoga in Delta where hot yoga classes are conducted was in the news in the Spring time for spreading misinformation about COVID19 suggesting that the virus cannot survive in hot temperatures. 

South Asian yoga studio owner and conspiracy theorist breaks quarantine act

Vancouver council delays decision on Olympic bid

Vancouver council delays decision on Olympic bid
In a message posted on social media, Coun. Melissa De Genova says she successfully delayed her motion until sometime in March 2021.

Vancouver council delays decision on Olympic bid

Trudeau to speak with France's Macron

Trudeau to speak with France's Macron
The incident marked the third gruesome attack in five weeks that French authorities have attributed to Muslim extremists, amid a growing furor over caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad that were republished by the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo

Trudeau to speak with France's Macron

Finding more flu shots for Canada won't be easy

Finding more flu shots for Canada won't be easy
Public health officials and politicians are asking "every" Canadian to get vaccinated against influenza so that hospitals overwhelmed by COVID-19 don't also get hit with a flu-season tsunami.

Finding more flu shots for Canada won't be easy

City of Surrey welcomes $15 Million in Joint Federal and Provincial COVID-19 Relief Funding

City of Surrey welcomes $15 Million in Joint Federal and Provincial COVID-19 Relief Funding
Today, the City of Surrey welcomes and is grateful for the nearly $15 million in federal and provincial funding from the COVID-19 Safe Restart Grant for Local Governments.

City of Surrey welcomes $15 Million in Joint Federal and Provincial COVID-19 Relief Funding