Federal judge to decide if $600M MMIWG class action, alleging systemic RCMP negligence, proceeds - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Federal judge to decide if $600M MMIWG class action, alleging systemic RCMP negligence, proceeds

Whether or not a massive class action for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls can move forward is now up to a judge to decide, after lawyers made their arguments in federal court on Thursday.

About 60 families have signed on to the case

Diane BigEagle, shown here, is the primary plaintiff of the class action. Her daughter went missing in 2007 and the case remains open. (Kendall Latimer/CBC)

Whether or not a massive class action for missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls can move forward is now up to a judge to decide, after lawyers made arguments for and against certification in a Federal Court hearing in Regina on Thursday.

The certification hearings for the $600-million lawsuit against the federal government and RCMP started Monday. About 60 families have signed on to the case, alleging systemic racism in the way the RCMP handled the deaths and disappearances of Indigenous women and girls.

"The government of Canada has not gone forward with anything regarding the wrongs, and it's for the judicial branch of government to take charge and to force a resolution," said Regina'sTony Merchant, principal of Merchant Law Group and the lawyer representing the plaintiffs.

The government also shouldn't be the one to dictate the way forward, said Merchant. A judge should make that decision after hearing arguments, he said.

The lawyer representing the federal government argued Thursday there is not enough commonality between members of the class action for this case to proceed.

But Merchant says that's a boilerplate defence in a case such as this.

"When you think about it, they all have the same complaints. The police didn't treat them well, the police thought that their rights were substandard rights," he said.

The defence also argued, among other things, that DianeBigEagle should not be the primary plaintiff ofthe case, because it was theRegina Police Servicenot the RCMP who searched for her daughter.

Danita Faith BigEaglehas been missing since 2007. Diane BigEaglereported her daughter's disappearance to police and did several interviews.

Four years later, an RCMP officer was brought on to open a dialogue between her and the Regina Police Service, but BigEagle saysthere never was an investigation, the officer did not review previous police work, and thesearch didn't extend outside Regina city limits.

The investigation into Danita's disappearance remains open.

Merchant is hopeful that the judge will decide in favour of the plaintiffs and allow the class action to proceed.

A class action allows a large number of people, who all allege they've beenbeen harmed by the same party, to seek legal reparations. The plaintiffs share the legal costs and would split whatever is granted to them if they win.

There is no word on when the judge will release her decision.

The Federal Court hearing in Regina began on Monday.Justice Glennys McVeigh, who is originally from Saskatchewan, flew from Ottawa to oversee the proceedings. The primary lawyer for the Crown isChristine Ashcroft.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said the RCMP helped Diane BigEagle open a dialogue with the RCMP. The story has been corrected to say the RCMP helped her open a dialogue with the Regina Police Service.
    Sep 25, 2020 8:56 AM CT

With files from Alex Soloducha