Source: https://caledoniavictimsproject.wordpress.com/2010/04/24/1536412-ontario-ltd-v-hccc-hdi-ruby-floyd-montour-hazel-hill-cayuga-occupation-may-june-2008/
Timestamp: 2019-04-23 12:50:46+00:00

Document:
Cayuga occupation, May 12/08: OPP refuses to remove illegal occupiers. Builder obtains injunction and also authorizes CANACE’s Gary McHale to gather evidence and lay charges. 9 Charges – Extortion, Intimidation, Mischief laid. Crown dropped all charges at 1st opportunity. OPP then laid 1 count Mischief vs. each vs. Floyd Montour and Ruby Montour (red hat).
re Haldimand Tract ownership: Ontario Court of Appeal – Isaac v. Davey (Ontario Court of Appeal, 1974).
re Aboriginal rights claims: Supreme Court of Canada (x3) – R. v. Sparrow (1990); R. v. Van der Peet (1996) and Delgamuukw v. British Columbia (1997).
re injunctions in context of aboriginal rights: Henco Industries v. Haudenosaunee Six Nations Confederacy Council (Court of Appeal, 2006); City of Brantford v. Haudenausanee Development Institute (Superior Court, 2008).
Order to end illegal occupation by native protesters.
 The remaining defendants’ [native protesters] resort to self-help, taken with the authorities’ refusal to defend the plaintiff’s property rights, has put the plaintiff in a most unfair position. The same government that advises the plaintiff not to pay extra-governmental development fees refuses to enforce its property rights and threatens to arrest its agents if they try to enforce these rights on their own.
 I would be the last person to interfere with the proper exercise of discretion by the authorities. I do think that it might be helpful to clear up some misapprehensions that they appear to have.
1. The police have the right to remove unwanted persons from private property at the request of the owners with or without an injunction.
2. The police have the right to use their discretion in the enforcement of the law and private property rights. A blanket refusal to assist a property owner or a class of property owners, however, would be an abuse of that right.
3. The police have no right to prevent the plaintiffs from acting within their rights under s.41 of the Criminal Code. Their warning to the plaintiff that they would arrest anyone who is involved in a physical confrontation, regardless of the circumstances, is an abuse of the power conferred on them by s.31 of the Criminal Code.
On May 12/08 members of CANACE were asked by a developer to gather evidence for the purposes of laying criminal charges against native protesters who had blocked access to their Cayuga townhouse development because the Ontario Provincial Police refused to enforce the law by removing them.

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