This indigenous Canadian teenager says local police harassed her on her way to school
A indigenous teenager in Ontario has filed a complaint against the local police department, alleging that police officers who stopped her on the street and demanded identification were aggressive and intimidating.
Cheyanne Moonias, 18, filed the complaint with Ontario’s Office of the Independent Police Review Director. She said that on her way back to school from lunch on Sept. 10, two police officers stopped her and first asked for identification, then allegedly said they were going to search her for drugs, the CBC reports:
“He looked like he was already going to grab me, he had his handcuffs out,” [Moonias] said. “I kept saying ‘no, I’m just a girl who was trying to get to school.’ I was crying too.”
Moonias said she asked if she could go, but was told to “stay put” or she would be arrested.
She asked again and the police “finally said ‘we will let you go, but this is not over,'” Moonias said. “They sounded so aggressive. I walked back to class. I felt so terrified.”
Moonias lives in Thunder Bay, Ontario to attend school, according to the CBC, more than 300 miles away from her family in the remote indigenous community of Neskantaga. For many indigenous (or “First Nations,” as many indigenous communities are called in Canada) children, attending high school hundreds of miles away from their families is their only option to get an education because of a lack of resources in their own communities.