Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Terrace RCMP Investigate Facebook Post Declaring 'Open Season' On First Nations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jan, 2015 10:57 AM
  • Terrace RCMP Investigate Facebook Post Declaring 'Open Season' On First Nations
TERRACE, B.C. — Terrace RCMP are investigating allegations that a hate crime was committed when someone posted a racist tirade on Facebook declaring "open season" on First Nations people.
 
The comments appear to have come from a local man's Facebook account and were a response to a recent Terrace Standard news article.
 
The newspaper's blocking software quickly removed the comment but not before a screenshot was taken and posted on a Facebook page belonging to West Coast Native News.
 
The screenshot has been shared more than 1,500 times and appears to show a comment that says the "only good Indian is a dead Indian" and "let's have open season on 'em."
 
RCMP Const. Angela Rabut says Mounties are now looking into it, but she adds it's unfortunate that negative comments attract so much attention and spread so quickly.
 
She says the Terrace detachment has been getting complaints about it from as far away as Saskatchewan. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Agreement Between Midwives And B.C. Born From Months Of Negotiations

Agreement Between Midwives And B.C. Born From Months Of Negotiations
VICTORIA — After months of negotiations, British Columbia and its registered midwives have reached  a five-year agreement.

Agreement Between Midwives And B.C. Born From Months Of Negotiations

Guilty Verdict In Fatal B.C. Ferry Sinking Upheld By Appeal Court

Guilty Verdict In Fatal B.C. Ferry Sinking Upheld By Appeal Court
VANCOUVER — A mariner who was convicted in the fatal sinking of a passenger ferry off B.C.'s coast has lost an appeal of the verdict.

Guilty Verdict In Fatal B.C. Ferry Sinking Upheld By Appeal Court

B.C. Sets Rate Structure For Truckers In 'Complicated' Situation At Busy Port

B.C. Sets Rate Structure For Truckers In 'Complicated' Situation At Busy Port
VICTORIA — In an effort to address issues from a bitter strike earlier this year, the B.C. government has released its proposed rate structure for Port Metro Vancouver container truckers.

B.C. Sets Rate Structure For Truckers In 'Complicated' Situation At Busy Port

Nova Scotia can't deny accreditation to Christian law school grads, lawyer says

Nova Scotia can't deny accreditation to Christian law school grads, lawyer says
HALIFAX — The Nova Scotia Barristers' Society doesn't have the authority to deny accreditation to law school graduates of a Christian university in British Columbia, a lawyer for the private school told a judicial review hearing Monday.

Nova Scotia can't deny accreditation to Christian law school grads, lawyer says

Students' Facebook page 'deeply disturbing,' says Dalhousie president

Students' Facebook page 'deeply disturbing,' says Dalhousie president
HALIFAX — Dalhousie University is investigating what it describes as "deeply disturbing" comments posted online about female students in the Halifax school's faculty of dentistry.

Students' Facebook page 'deeply disturbing,' says Dalhousie president

Manitoba chief says fire inspections would condemn reserve homes

Manitoba chief says fire inspections would condemn reserve homes
WINNIPEG — The chief of a northern Manitoba reserve where a baby died in a house fire says his band can't afford to have its homes inspected for hazards.

Manitoba chief says fire inspections would condemn reserve homes