Thunder Bay police officer allowed bridal photo shoot while guarding scene of Indigenous woman's death
CBC
A First Nation's leader says it's disturbing that a Thunder Bay, Ont., police officer allowed a wedding party to take photos at the scene where an Indigenous woman was found dead while he was tasked with guarding the scene.
Anna Betty Achneepineskum, deputy grand chief of Nishnawbe Aski Nation, was reacting to a social media post that showed the officer alongside the bridal party at the city's waterfront Marina Park over the weekend.
Thunder Bay Police Service officers sent to Marina Park, where the woman's body was found on July 8, started holding the scene that morning. The scene was released Monday.
"We want things to change. We want to build a good relationship with the Thunder Bay Police Service," Achneepineskum said. "But actions like that … it's just not right."
Dave Guilbeault, who said the woman who died was his daughter's best friend, had gone to Marina Park over the weekend to show support for the family. He said he saw a bridal party taking photos in a police vehicle at the scene. He posted photos and the video to Facebook on Saturday night.
"That's the true Thunder Bay right there," a voice in the video can be heard saying.
In the Facebook post, Guilbeault said the officer showed a lack of respect and was laughing until he confronted the group, which led to the officer apologizing.
CBC News has been unable to obtain the name of the police officer involved in the incident.
Police spokesperson Chris Adams said the bride had a connection to a retired officer in the force.
"This was an impromptu situation where the bride approached the officer and requested a photo be taken in the cruiser," Adams said in a written statement.
"There was no intent to cause any indignity or disrespect to anyone based on where the officer was located. Public interactions with our officers who are parked or situated in settings which have a high number of pedestrians, such as a park, are quite common."
Achneepineskum, however, said: "The conduct was not only harmful in terms of the family members who were involved, but also in terms of the public's views of the Thunder Bay police."
Thunder Bay police leaders have long said they are committed to repairing a fractured relationship with the Indigenous community.
External reviews of the force and its oversight board released in 2018 identified systemic racism at an institutional level within the police service, along with a pattern of deficient and inadequate death investigations involving Indigenous people. That led to reinvestigations of nine deaths.