City of Montreal settles with Black woman whose arm was broken by police - Action News
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Montreal

City of Montreal settles with Black woman whose arm was broken by police

Majiza Philip tapped on a police car window to let a friend know she had his coat. Officers arrested her and broke her arm, then charged her with assault. A judge cleared her and now the City of Montreal is settling with her out of court.

Settlement is 2nd in recent days involving city, police and a Black person

Majiza Philip shows the the scar on her arm, the result of her arrest in 2014. She says it's hard to explain to people how and why Montreal police broke her arm. (Simon Martel/CBC)

What was supposed to be a fun night out for Majiza Philip and her roommate Shanein 2014, turned into a broken arm and months of depression and anxiety after being arrested by Montreal police officers.

Now, almost eight years later, the City of Montreal has reached an out-of-court settlement with Philip after she filed a $700,000civil suit against the municipalityand police officersric Sabourin and Steve Thibert.

An email from a city spokeswoman confirmed Philip willreceive just under $95,000. Her case had beenscheduled to go to courtin April.

It's a huge relief to the 33-year-old woman.

"It's a strange feeling to be happy over something so traumatic in my life. I guess to get an outcome like this is a beautiful thing," said Philip. "But there's still that reality of what happened to me."

What happened to Philip is an event she won't soon forget.

Philip and her friend went to a rap concert at a downtown Montreal concert hall in November 2014. After the show, officers arrested her friend for being drunk in public and placed him in the back of a police cruiser.

Philip tapped on the police car window to tell him she would meet him at the police station with his coat and belongings.

It was then that officers claimed Philip tried to break the cruiser's window tryingto free O'Brien. Three officers arrested her, breaking her left arm in the process. She now has a long scar after surgery to repair the injury.

The scar on Majiza Philip's left arm is the result of surgery to repair the break caused by Montreal police. (Simon Martel/CBC)

Months later, while filing a complaint with the Police Ethics Commission, Philip learned to her surprise that she was facing charges in municipal court for assaulting police officers and obstructing justice.

Judge Katia Mouscardy acquitted her ofall charges, casting doubt on the officers' version of events in the 2017 trial.

"The testimony heard in prosecution gives the impression that one tried to camouflage an intervention that took a bad turn," she wrote in her ruling. "The multiple contradictions and oversights in the police testimony force the Court to question their willingness to truthfully relate what happened with Philip."

'Every day I see a six-inch scar on my arm, and I think about it.'

Philip believes officers treated her differently that night in 2014 because she is Black.

She says she still lives with the memories, feeling anxious when she sees police officers or hears asiren. She says she struggles to explain what happened to the curious 7-year-old children she teaches tap dancing to,when they ask about the scar on her arm.

"I teach a fair amount of white children, and so it's actually a very sensitive thing to have to bring up because they look at me with such hope and love," said Philip.

"And for me to tell them that, you know, 'I was assaulted by an officer,' they can't really comprehend it at that age. And then when they ask me why, I'm like 'I don't know why. I can't tell you why.'"

"So it's a weird lifelong experience, a trauma that I'm going to be dealing with [for] the rest of my life."

WATCH: Majiza Philip on how she lasted through the ordeal:

Majiza Philip says she felt the colour of her skin through entire process

2 years ago
Duration 2:29
Following her settlement with the City of Montreal, Majiza Philip explains the impact the seven-year ordeal has had on her life.

City possibly more willing to settle cases

Philip's lawyer says he doesn't know why the city decided to settle with his client. But Max Silverman believes the evidence in Philip's favour was overwhelming and that mayhave played a role.

This is the second case in recent days that the city has settled involving police and a Black person, and where racial profiling was brought up as a contributing factor in the actions of the officers involved.

Last week, it was announced that Montreal has settledwith the family of Pierre Coriolan, a 58-year-old Black man who was shot and killed by police in 2017.

Philip's lawyer, Max Silverman, believes the evidence in his clients favour was overwhelming and that may have spurred the City of Montreal to settle. (Simon Martel/CBC)

"I can't speak to the motivations going on inside the city," said Silverman.

"But there appears to be a new trend in how the city is handling these [cases], which, as you know, citizens and residents of Montreal can only see as a good thing, that they're taking these files seriously and treating the survivors of police violence with the respect and dignity and attention that their files deserve."

Fo Niemi of the Centre for Research-Action on Race Relations, who worked with Philip, hopes the settlement spells a new approach by the city. (CBC)

Fo Niemi from Montreal's Center for Research-Action on Race Relations (CRARR) has worked with Philip on this file since her arrest.

He says it was a responsible move on the city's behalf to settle, and avoid an expensive trial attaxpayers' expense. But more importantly, he feels it might signal a new way of dealing with racialized communities.

"The city, in the sense of saying that there's something very wrong with the way that the police interact with ordinary citizens, particularly racialized citizens, that resultsin serious injuries or deaths," said Niemi.

"The city may be taking a new approach to resolving this situation, and also hopefully to create a new bond of trust with the Black and other racialized groups in the city."

Niemi says he knows of other cases involving the city, either before the Human Rights Tribunal of Quebec or the courts, where the city appears willing to settle.

Philip says the years since that encounter with the police have been difficult. But she feels she's stronger.

"I have been in such a cloud for so long, and it's a process," she said. "I feel like I am definitely going to get out on the brighter side."

Philip's complaint and subsequent appeal to Quebec's Police Ethics Commission were thrown out.

The city of Montreal and the city's police department, the Service de Police de la Ville de Montral,both refused comment on the matter.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

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(CBC)