FSIN calls for Prince Albert police accountability and change after infant death
Global News
Kyla Frenchman's legal counsel Eleanore Sunchild called the situation a travesty, noting the Prince Albert Police Service had a duty to protect Frenchman and her son, and failed.
The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations is calling for more to be done after a report by the Public Complaints Commission was released regarding the death of Tanner Brass on Feb. 10, 2022.
Chief Bobby Cameron said the report confirmed what FSIN already knew, and pushed for a Coroner’s Inquest, intervention by the Ministry of Corrections, and an overall greater investigation into the matter.
Kyla Frenchman’s legal counsel Eleanore Sunchild called the situation a travesty, noting the Prince Albert Police Service had a duty to protect Frenchman and her son, and failed.
She called for the police service to be held accountable.
“There needs to be a full-scale inquiry into the Prince Albert Police Service,” Sunchild said.
She claimed the officers who attended did not have proper training, and that it was a common issue with Prince Albert police.
“This was a preventable tragedy.”
Sunchild said the police chief resigned, but so should the officers involved in the incident.