Advocate calls for increased punitive damages in deaths of indigenous women
MEMBERTOU, N.S. — Canada’s legal system fails to attach enough value to the loss of an Indigenous woman’s life, according to an advocate for the family of a Nova Scotia Mi’kmaq woman who died after being held in a police cell in 2009.
Cheryl Maloney testified Tuesday that legal changes need to be made to help families sue for punitive damages in cases of wrongful death like that of Victoria Rose Paul of Indian Brook First Nation.
“We are worth less, over and over again, because of government’s laws, policies and inactions,” she said during testimony before the National Inquiry into Murdered and Missing Women and Girls in Membertou First Nation in Cape Breton.
An independent report concluded five years ago that police did not properly monitor the 44-year-old woman’s health after she was arrested Aug. 28, 2009, outside a Truro bar for public drunkenness and was taken the following day to a Halifax hospital, where she died on Sept. 5, 2009.


