Thank you, sir.
Good afternoon, everyone.
I come from an indigenous police service. Here at the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory, we have seen a drastic increase in violent crimes over the past few years mainly due to the infestation of illicit drugs within the community. Outsiders are supplying the drugs. As a result, community members become addicts, resulting in an increase in violent crimes. We have also lost numerous community members to fentanyl overdoses in the last few years.
In my 30 years as a police officer on Six Nations, this violence has become unprecedented. Many community members have died due to the opioid crisis that the entire country is facing. Homicides have become increasingly frequent. The root cause of all this is drug addiction, which results in people committing other residual crimes, such as break-ins, theft, auto theft, etc., to feed that addiction.
In my experience, sentences imposed by the courts have shown no deterrent effect against this criminal activity. We have charged the same people for the same drug trafficking offences several times over, and they still continue to traffic in this community. Rarely is there a custodial sentence for controlled drugs and substances trafficking. In conjunction with the drug charges, traffickers arm themselves with various types of weapons, including firearms that are both prohibited and restricted. None of the traffickers has the proper licence to even possess these firearms. There needs to be a deterrent to persons committing acts of violence when armed with firearms. Regardless of race or ethnicity, there needs to be a deterrent in place for offenders to realize that the violence in our community and against others needs to stop before any further loss of life.
Our Haudenosaunee way of life here at Six Nations is suffering. The recent mental health review of the Ontario indigenous police services contains a comparison of crime severity between indigenous and non-indigenous communities. The crime severity index for the Six Nations of the Grand River in 2020 was 217.62 compared with Brantford at 112.95; Hamilton at 93.53; and Toronto at 90.41. The current murder rate per capita in Ontario is 1.59 per 100,000 of population. The rate here at Six Nations is 7.79.
The proposed conditional sentences for violent offences will not deter offenders from committing further crimes. We are not in a position to continuously monitor sentenced offenders to ensure their compliance with the conditional sentence restrictions handed down by the courts. Police services across the country, and especially those within indigenous communities, are significantly understaffed. We are continuously asked to do more with less, and we cannot sustain this workload. We are currently faced with officers being off for mental health and mental well-being. This will worsen as time goes on.
The Gladue case law for sentencing purposes also has a great influence on whether or not an offender receives a custodial sentence. I can appreciate the statistics regarding the overrepresentation of indigenous offenders in our jails, but along with the rights of offenders, victims and victims' families deserve rights as well. Gladue has a place in sentencing of certain individuals, but those repeat offenders know the difference between right and wrong, and the sentencing principles under Gladue are exploited to the benefit of these offenders.
In my experience growing up and working here on Six Nations, indigenous communities everywhere, as well as here, face the same issues. Intergenerational trauma from the residential school system still plagues our communities. There is a lack of social programs, a lack of infrastructure that non-indigenous communities take for granted—including, for example, clean drinking water and housing—and the list goes on. It is more than just improved law enforcement that is needed to better the lives of all indigenous people in this country.
Among indigenous people there is a inherited historical lack of trust in the justice system and other federal statutes, such as the Indian Act. Colonization has imposed this and other cultural values, such as religion and policies, on indigenous peoples who do not favour them. For some indigenous nations their way of life is no more. For far too long our people have suffered under the effects of colonization. We deserve to feel safe and, more importantly, our children deserve to grow up in a community free from violence. I implore you to consider the well-being not only of the people of Six Nations, but also of all indigenous communities on Turtle Island, when making your decision on proposed Bill C-5.
I'd like to thank this committee for their time today. I look forward to your final decision on this important matter.
Thank you.