Friday, September 20, 2019

Surrey Cops Rip Turban Off Head of Sikh Man in Custody


A Surrey man, Kanwaljit Singh, has filed a lawsuit against the RCMP alleging excessive force for ripping his turban off his head and pulling his hair out of its topknot while he was in custody on June 30, 2017. Singh claims that RCMP also twisted his arm and grabbed his hair. One of the officers involved has been identified as Sergeant Brian Blair who was the non-commissioned officer in charge of the Surrey RCMP detachment holding cell area.  


Singh calls himself a “devout Sikh man who wears his turban as part of his religious practice.” He views the removal of the turban as a violent action that is “an insult to those beliefs.”

The defendants in the suit to the BC Supreme Court include the Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General of BC, the Attorney General of Canada and Sergeant Blair.


RCMP claim that their policy and practice does not allow the wearing of turbans in holding cells. They do not deny removing Singh’s turban but say doing so was not excessive.

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Charges Stayed against Elizabeth Cucheran, Cop Who Killed Hudson Brooks


RCMP Constable Elizabeth Cucheran shot and killed 20-year-old Hudson Brooks on July 18, 2015 outside the South Surrey RCMP detachment. Cucheran shot the young Brooks nine times, of a total of 12 shots she fired at him. Brooks was in obvious distress at the time, was shirtless and shoeless. He needed support and acre, but that is not what police provide. They are agents of state violence and brutality.


On September 18, 2019, the prosecution service of British Columbia did what prosecutors typically do in cases of police killing members of our communities. They let the killer cop off and stayed the charges against Cucheran. Charges that only included aggravated assault and assault with a weapon, no murder or even manslaughter. For shooting someone nine times. Cucheran was so out of control that she even shot herself, a fact that RCMP initially tried to imply was a result of a shootout with the victim.


The Brooks family and friends are obviously, and rightly, hurt by this decision, an additional act of state violence against them. This decision is an outrage and an offense to our communities. And a killer cop is free to terrorize our communities further.

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

IIO Investigates Death of Man after Release from Custody


The Independent Investigations Office (IIO) is investigating the death of a man who was struck and killed by a vehicle shortly after being released from police custody in Surrey on September 14, 2019. The IIO reports that the man was walking near 152 Street and 56 Avenue when he was struck by a vehicle a bit after 10:30 PM. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The IIO is investigating what role police actions or inactions might have played in the man’s death.

Friday, September 13, 2019

Platforming Fascists: Surrey Board of Trade Host Maxime Bernier (People’s Party of Canada Leader)


Business has provided the base of support for fascism historically. Fascists provide the bare force of violence to smash working class movements and community solidarity in times of crisis (including political legitimation crises). So it is in no way surprising that the Surrey Board of Trade is hosting People’s Party of Canada (PPC) leader Maxime Bernier for a “town hall” on September 25, 2019.


Bernier’s PPC has been associated with, identified as, a fascist formation, not only because of its positions and statements, which express xenophobia, Islamophobia, racism, and anti-migrant sentiments—but because some party members and candidates have connections with fascist organizations and groups, or have been members of those groups themselves. Bernier himself has associated with identified fascists.



Details of the Surrey Board of Trade townhall with Maxime Bernier are as follows:



Name: September 25, 2019 - Fourth Business Town Hall with People's Party of Canada Leader, Maxime Bernier

Date: September 25, 2019

Time: 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM PDT

Location:

Sheraton Vancouver Guildford Hotel 15269 104 Ave, Surrey



The event is listed as free to attend. Community members who oppose racism, xenophobia, and fascism in our community, and do not appreciate the Surrey Board of Trade providing a platform for racists, xenophobes, and fascists in our city (no matter how much businesses benefit from fascism) might wish to show up to let them all know where we stand.

Surrey Board of Trade Copaganda: Police Officer of the Year Awards


Policing has always been founded in and serves the function of protecting and reproducing capitalist markets, unequal distribution of resources, and conditions of profitability. So it is no surprise that businesses promote the cops (whose mandate they actually drive) who serve them.


On Thursday, October 10, 2019, the Surrey Board of Trade is holding the 23rd of its copaganda “Surrey Police Officer of the Year Awards” to thank the cops in Surrey who have best served business in harassing and punishing poor and homeless people, surveilling and regulating racialized, Indigenous, working class people and communities, making parents fearful of their children, stoking fear politics, and generally making Surrey safe for capitalism. This in a city where police have killed at least two people and shot at least one more, this year alone.



Details of this copaganda exercise are as follows:



Name: October 10, 2019 - 23rd Annual Surrey Police Officer of the Year Awards

Date: October 10, 2019

Time: 6:00 PM - 9:30 PM PDT

Location:

Sheraton Vancouver Guildford Hotel

15269 104 Avenue, Surrey



The cost to attend is $105 + tax, so it is clearly designed for regular folks.



It would be a real shame if people showed up to demonstrate against this obscene spectacle of authoritarianism, state violence, subjugation, and the massive waste of needed public resources on police rather than communities.

Monday, September 9, 2019

Labour and Policing: Conversations on Policing Sex Work and Labour Movements (An Anti-Police Power Surrey Panel)


Anti-Police Power Surrey (APPS) is hosting a panel, “Labour and Policing: Conversations on Policing Sex Work and Labour Movements.”



At Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Surrey Campus (Unceded Coast Salish territories).

Wednesday, September 11, 2019. 7-10

Fir Building, Room 128



Speakers include:


Mary Shearman (Simon Fraser University). “Histories of Policing and Sex Work.”


Eva Ureta (APPS). “On Histories of Police Associations and On Current Policing in Surrey.”


C. Sano (Canadian Union of Postal Workers). “Labour Movements and Union Busting in Canada.”


Jeff Shantz (APPS and KPU Faculty). “On the Political Functions of Policing.”



Anti-Police Power Surrey (APPS) is a group of people living and working in Surrey who oppose the domination of police, police violence and repression, and the wasteful, and wildly disproportionate, expenditure of public resources on policing in Surrey. APPS calls for social resources for communities not cops, for people not police and aims for the development of non-repressive social supports and care.