RCMP back at B.C. logging blockades after high court confirmed protester's acquittal - Action News
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British Columbia

RCMP back at B.C. logging blockades after high court confirmed protester's acquittal

Mounties are back enforcing an injunctionagainst anti-logging protesters on Vancouver Island less than a weekafter the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed the acquittal of aprotester at the same site because police failed to fully read out acourt order.

Protester acquitted at the same site because police failed to fully read out court order

Numerous protesters face an RCMP officer outside at a anti-logging encampment.
Anti-logging protesters at Fairy Creek near Port Renfrew, B.C., speak with an RCMP officer on Sept. 29, 2021. (Ken Mizokoshi/CBC)

Mounties are back enforcing an injunctionagainst anti-logging protesters on Vancouver Island less than a weekafter the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed the acquittal of aprotester at the same site because police failed to fully read out acourt order.

RCMP saidin a statement that there have been numerous violationsof the court-ordered injunction granted to Teal Cedar Products inApril of 2021, so their officers have returned to the Fairy CreekWatershed near Lake Cowichan.

The Fairy Creek protests began after logging permits were granted in 2020, allowing Teal Cedar Products to cut timber, including old-growth trees, in areas including the Fairy Creek watershed northeast of Port Renfrew, B.C.

Police say there are reports that Teal Cedar's employees arebeing harassed, equipment has been vandalized, and the company hasbeen prevented from harvesting timber.

The RCMP say in a subsequent news release on Tuesday that they spoke with protesters who were blocking a bridge and when they failed to obey the injunction or leave, three were arrested for breaching the court's order.

One officer was allegedly assaulted by a suspect who took off into the woods, and police say a report to the Crown will be forwarded for consideration of criminal charges.

A group of rain-soaked protesters stand on a gravel forest service road looking toward an RCMP officer in a dark blue uniform.
Anti-logging protesters at Fairy Creek near Port Renfrew, B.C., on Sept. 29, 2021. (Ken Mizokoshi/CBC)

Confrontations between police and protesters have led to morethan 1,100 arrests since 2021, but when a court tossed one casebecause police didn't read the entire injunction, dozens moreacquittals followed. B.C.'s prosecution service dropped 146 casesafter the high court's decision last Thursday.

A statement from the B.C. Prosecution Service on Thursday said the cases were dropped because their ability to succeed was "placed in doubt" by a ruling that acquitted protester Ryan Henderson in February.

The service's announcement came afterthe Supreme Court of Canada said on the same dayit would not hear the Crown's appeal of the Henderson decision, marking the end of the legal road for prosecutors trying to keep the cases against protesters alive.

The ruling is also a victory for demonstrators who said the officers' script did not pass the legal test.

Henderson was cleared of contempt in February when a B.C. Supreme Court justice found RCMP officers read only a shortened version of an injunction to hundreds of protesters, including Henderson, who were arrested at the Fairy Creek logging blockade on southern Vancouver Island.

The court ruled the officers' shortened script didn't include enough information to give protesters enough "actual knowledge'' to understand the order they were accused of breaking and prove the demonstrators were "wilfully blind'' to those terms.

With files from Rhianna Schmunk