STORY about DIRECT ACTIONPEACE/WARPOLICE/PRISONSSOLIDARITY posted on JULY 21, 2010 by NATALIE GRAY ‘They Sought to Terrify us out of the Streets’ Activist Speaks out Against Police Brutality at Rally in Vancouver [Recorded at downtown Vancouver demonstration calling for a public inquiry regarding police actions at the Toronto G20.] mediacoop.ca
This is what a fresh rubber bullet wound looks like.
Hey everyone, my name is Natalie Gray. I’d like to start by acknowledging that we are gathered here today on unceded occupied Coast Salish Territory.
At the end of June, I went to Toronto to exercise my civil rights and march in active opposition to the G8 and G20 meetings being held there. On Sunday June 27th, I attended a jail solidarity protest that was peaceful. Without warning a line of riot police started moving towards us, and while running away, I was shot twice with rubber bullets, then arrested and incarcerated for 30 hours. I have been charged with obstruction of a peace officer. I have never been more terrified, more dehumanized or more in pain than I was that day. I wish my story were unique.
Over one billion dollars of tax payer’s money funded the weekend’s tragedy, which was executed by 20,000 police officers and their artillery. Over one thousand demonstrators, media and passersby were indiscriminately incarcerated and subjected to abuses similar and in many cases worse than what I experienced. As demonstrators, we were in the streets to resist the systemic and violent oppression of people here at home and around the world caused by the capitalist, corporate strategies solidified, agreed upon and celebrated by the leaders at the G8 and G20 summits. We got a brief taste this weekend of the very human rights abuses we were there to oppose. Here’s my story.
I was at the jail solidarity rally on Sunday June 27th, outside of the detention centre in support of my friends who had been surrounded and arrested in Queen’s Park, the designated protest zone, the day before. Sunday’s protest followed the route decided upon by the police, and was proceeding peacefully. A line of riot police formed between us and the detention centre. Without warning, two unmarked minivans screeched to a stop behind the police line. A number of plainclothes men stormed through the line and into the crowd, violently pushing two people into the ground. The people were dragged along the pavement and aggressively thrown into the vans and the vans took off. To all who were there, this appeared to be a strategically orchestrated kidnapping. The small woman who was snatched later became my cellmate. She told me of being choked and sat on by two large men to the verge of unconsciousness. A third man pulled her hair and all three verbally abused her, referring to her as ‘cunt’, ‘bitch’, ‘whore’, and ‘street trash’ on the way to the detention centre. All three refused to identify themselves.
At this point we decided to de-escalate the situation by sitting down. We chanted ‘we are peaceful, how about you’ and clapped our hands. During this time, officers donning helmets, body armour, gas masks, and weapons resembling tear gas guns filled in the line in front of us. Several minutes later, once again without warning, the police line started moving quickly toward us. We stood up and moved backwards, complying with the yells of the officers to get back. Soon thereafter, the riot line parted to let an officer through who was wielding a large, intimidating weapon.
As an asthmatic, I had bought a painter’s respirator from a hardware store to cover my face in case chemical weapons were used during the weekend. I had no idea what the weapon behind us was, so as a precaution, I reached into my bag, took out the mask and put it over my face. Not wanting to have my back to the weapon, I turned to face it while retreating. It was then that I was shot in the sternum. As I went to turn, I was shot again in the elbow, and I immediately hit the ground, falling into the fetal position. I remember simply hoping that someone was on their way to help me, and I knew I couldn’t get up by myself.

Several police shoved me face first into the pavement. They yelled at me to stop resisting and kneeled on top of me.
A person ran back for me and attempted to help me to my feet, but on my way up, the riot line caught up to us and several police shoved me face first into the pavement. They yelled at me to stop resisting and kneeled on top of me. I was terrified, and lost control of my bladder. All I remember was begging them to be gentle because I was hurt. They then dragged me to my feet and walked me to a nearby cruiser, the officer on my left insisting on gripping my arm over the bullet wound.
The first half-hour of my incarceration was spent lying in the fetal position in the cruiser, and being dragged to various places within the compound. They didn’t seem to know what to do with me, and I repeatedly asked every officer I saw for medical attention. The first time I was dragged out, they brought me over to a sergeant, and told him I was asking to see a doctor. He said ‘too bad’. I then repeated my request, and was told by the sergeant to ‘suck it up’. Approximately thirty minutes after my arrest, I finally had my vitals checked, and was given acetaminophen. All the detention centre doctors had to offer was acetaminophen or ibuprofen. I was then put on a stretcher in an ambulance. This was when I overheard officers confirming why I had been targeted. It was because I had put the respirator on my face.
It was one hour later that I arrived at the hospital, and was checked for internal bleeding and broken bones. Thankfully I suffered from neither; an hour and a half of internal bleeding could’ve left me dead. I was then brought back to the detention centre, and upon arrival, put in a solitary cell. The detention centre was a series of metal cages in several large, cold, concrete rooms. The solitary cells were in a row against one wall against one wall in the second room, with sheet metal blocking the view on three sides. I was soon brought into a makeshift office and interrogated by three male officers. One of them referred to me as ‘sir’ immediately after I told him my name, and asked if I preferred to be called ‘Natalie’ or ‘Gray’, implying that my physical appearance didn’t represent my sex.
The cop first shot me in the sternum.
Every prisoner I’ve spoken to experienced some type of verbal abuse at the hands of officers. Based on appearance, the officers categorized and harassed people according to race, gender, sexual orientation, physical capability, gender identity, presumed income and whatever else came to their minds. A person in a cell next to mine was told to ‘stop crying, faggot’. A racialized person was told ‘we let you into this country and this is what you do?’. A woman was told she was going to be repeatedly raped while she was in jail. The scope and consistency of the verbal abuse in the detention centre is difficult to articulate.
After being interrogated, I was led to be strip searched. When I repeated several times that I wanted to speak to a lawyer before being strip searched, I was surrounded by approximately eight officers. A male officer referred to me in third person and said, ‘I know she’ll behave because if she doesn’t, she knows we’ll be coming in’, referring to himself and several other male officers. I was strip searched by four female officers. My search was minor in comparison to that of one woman, who was strip searched by several male officers and had a finger put inside her.
Afterwards, the officers escorted me back to my cell, sporadically moving me to different ones throughout the course of my incarceration. I knew that four hours after my hospital visit, the acetaminophen would wear off and I’d be in severe pain again. So I started asking officers if I’d be treated. I also needed to take my asthma medication. An hour and a half after I started asking to see the physician, I was finally brought to one. Throughout my stay, I would tell the officers my pain medication was about to wear off about twenty minutes in advance. They would wait until I was hunched over, shaking, clutching my arm to my front and crying before bringing me to the physician. I remember hearing a woman asking to see the doctor, and the officers told her to stand up. She told them that she couldn’t, that she was too injured to do so. They told her if she couldn’t stand up, she couldn’t see the doctor, and left her in her cell.
We were occasionally given buns of white bread with a slice of processed cheese in the middle to eat and small styrofoam cups of water to drink . The bathrooms were outhouses without doors that faced the officers. The solitary cells didn’t have bathrooms. The floors and benches were concrete, and puddles were common. The officers refused us blankets and warm clothing. I was refused a fresh pair of pants, and spent all 30 hours in the pants I had urinated in. There were fluorescent lights on 24/7. I huddled up in a corner of the cage, and dozed off for a couple minutes around midnight. But I was too hungry, cold and injured to sleep that night, like many other prisoners. I continued throughout the night to try and see the doctor every four hours.
The next morning, I was put in a paddy wagon with several other people and driven to the courthouse. One of them was a black man. He told me that he had been walking through Queen’s Park when a police officer called him over. He was then surrounded and beaten by fifteen officers. They kicked him and stomped on his face. When he put his hands over his face, they yelled at him to ‘stop resisting’. His jaw had been broken and several of his ribs were cracked. He had been charged with resisting arrest.
I was among the lucky people that were released on bail Monday. My bail was $1000 with a number of conditions. It felt weird to leave my cellmates behind, but they reassured me and hugged me and gave me their family’s phone numbers to call from the outside. Most people had been denied their rights to a phone call. I stepped out into the sun and immediately burst into tears. I sat on the ground outside the courthouse with some wonderful people who had brought real food and medical supplies for the people getting out. While I was waiting for my friends to get there, ten police officers surrounded six of us and told us to get off the property. They followed us onto the sidewalk and harassed us until we were well away from the area. I was given a ride to my friend’s place where I was staying. As part of my conditions, I was restricted to that apartment and spent a week in there, constantly in fear of a knock at the door and being taken back into police custody.
While most of the 1,000 arrestees have been released, 12 people remain incarcerated. These individuals have been charged with conspiracy, with bails set upwards of $85,000. These political prisoners have been strategically targeted in an attempt to discredit and undermine our grassroots organizations. These people are our friends and our comrades. he systemic brutality and torture that 1,000 human beings were subjected to that weekend leaves no question of who the real criminals are.
They sought to crush our democratic rights to freedom of assembly and freedom of speech. They sought to terrify us out of the streets. They sought to silence our dissent. And they hoped no-one would notice.
Stephen Harper, Dalton McGuinty and Bill Blair are criminals, and they made one big mistake.
They underestimated us.
We are hurt. We are sad. We are angry.
We are also as passionate, as capable, and as determined as ever before.
This tragedy has enraged us, inspired us, united us.
And we stand here with our parents. We stand here with our siblings. We stand here with our children. We stand here with our friends. We stand here with our lovers. We stand here with our cousins and our neighbours and our coworkers.
We stand to demand answers and hold the criminals responsible.
We stand here to insist on the rights of every human being in this nation.
But we cannot forget those elsewhere. We must insist on our right to flood the streets in solidarity with those around the world whose day-to-day survival is resistance. Whose struggle for clean water, clean air, clean land, self-determination and peace is their way of life. Whose tragedies are a direct result of the illegitimate, criminal choices made by Stephen Harper and the rest of the G8 and G20 thugs. Those whose activism deserves global solidarity.
Our so-called leaders have no idea what they’ve gotten themselves into.
We’re here. We’re strong. We resist.
Natalie Gray
A Maple Ridge mother is horrified that riot police fired rubber bullets at her 20-year-old daughter, causing injuries, then arrested her and locked her up for over a day after she participated in a peaceful demonstration at the G20 summit Sunday. Elizabeth Rosenau doesn’t believe there was any justification for what happened to her daughter Natalie Gray, who weighs 120 pounds. “I haven’t been able to sleep. I’m in such shock and disbelief,” said Rosenau. “Having spent two days watching and re-watching the videos of the detention centre protest I can only say that my whole family’s faith in the police is deeply shaken. I cannot believe this happened in Canada, a place that people come because we have freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, a decent law enforcement system and justice for all. To watch that footage made me deeply ashamed of the police state that my daughter had to witness and be part of.” Rosenau said her daughter was “incredibly shaken” and was “weeping” on the phone when she called to say what had happened. “She told me she felt this had changed her forever. I feel like I’ve been changed forever too,” she said. [Read more: Richmond News ]
I sent the following to the MRidge Times reporter for the last article that involved NG and the G20.. here’s a copy: (simply put though … you should not have been there, and you lacked the common sense to remove yourself)
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Morning, would be nice if there were an area to comment at the end of any article on the website. Since there isn’t, I think the mother and daughter involved should consider this:
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Subject: Can someone help me out with the Situation in Canada and the G20 summit?
Everybody and their dog has an opinion these days and technology allows that to be dispersed among the world instantly.
I think people forget that in the end any (so called) democratic government has been set in place with policies and procedures to simplify the statement;
“We’re doing the (hopefully) best we can – and if you can find a better way, get in the game and show us.”
So at the G8/20 you have the most influential government leaders of the world. Since everyone and their dog has a thought and opportunity to do near whatever they like, there must be extremely heavy security for the protection of meetings such as these.
IMO, if you were a peaceful protester with any common sense, as soon as any criminal activity began to occur (whether you saw it or it showed up as it did on youtube/ipods etc rather quickly), you would have ceased your presence on the streets of Toronto. Also IMO, those that remained are ignorant.
Even if .all. were peaceful and stayed peaceful, that protest will have zero effect on governments, policies or procedures of democracy. Where’s the common sense and understanding of these protesters? They just love the drama of it all period.
Toronto police get a thumbs up on this one. I would have been much more severe for their insolence.
…. A day or two later:
This is why I said above that heavy security would be necessary since the dogs are out.
Group claims responsibility for Que. army centre bombing posted:
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QUEBEC — A little known radical group has claimed responsibility for the bombing that ripped through a Canadian Forces recruitment office in Trois-Rivieres, Que., early Friday.
The blast occurred at 3 a.m. when the building was empty.
Police received a bomb-threat call 20 minutes before the explosion, and no one was injured in the attack, which was called a shock by a spokesman for the recruitment centre.
A group calling itself Resistance internationaliste issued a statement Friday claiming to have detonated an explosive in the centre. In a two-page e-mail, the group lashed out at Canada’s military practices and ideals, the war in Afghanistan and police “violence” at last weekend’s G20 summit in Toronto.
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Thanks so much for this speech, Natalie, and for your courage in going forward with a suit against the police. As a mom whose son was beaten, injured, arrested, denied medical attention or the right to contact anyone, told “Fuck you” when he asked for a badge number, held for 24 hours and was never charged with anything because he hadn’t done anything, I’m empty and sad and angry and still in shock. My letter to authorities is on my website, http://www.grettavosper.ca, but I really wonder whether the many questions in it will ever be answered. Natalie is right, though; the government has underestimated us. Despite the too embarrassing silence and lack of awareness of most Canadians, we will work, carefully and diligently, to help people see how important this is, to make sure that we hold onto our civil liberties and to ensure they are extended to all, both here and in other places in the world where this kind of brutal response to dissent is an everyday experience.
So proud of you.
Being in the military I was ashamed how most of the protesters behaved. We fight for your right to be an idiot. I hope next time they use real bullets. You desirve what you got Natile.
Hi Natalie,
This is horrible treatment; I commend you for your bravery. It’s a CBC story now, which means it has a lot of exposure, and all the attendant moronic responses such as “she deserves it for attacking the police”, etc.
Hopefully something good comes out of all this: maybe people open their eyes and see what is happening to human rights and freedoms, this time in our own back yard.
I have seen a number of comments pointing out that in the arrest photo, your arm is not injured. This is of course wrong; to emphasize this, I’ve zoomed, resampled, and enhanced the image to demonstrate that the arm is clearly bruised from an impact. If you have any use for the image, I’ve uploaded it here:
http://www.typically.net/FTP/Img_0724_0_zoom_adj.png
Good luck with everything, keep fighting the good fight!
Jamie,
You fight for nothing but the corporation. Nothing you are doing in Iraq or Afghanistan helps Canadians in any way – it merely costs us money. I’m not surprised that someone as hateful as you would sign up to kill people. One can only hope that you, and those like you, never make it out of the war zone alive – to bring your hateful vitriol back here to peace-loving Canada.
My great grandfather fought too, fought against exactly the kind of fascism exercised by police on innocent people. He fought to protect the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms – which explicitly protects our “right to peaceful protest and assembly.” You should try reading it sometime. It will help you to understand what you are supposed to be doing, instead of killing innocent women and children for oil.
http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/charter/1.html#anchorbo-ga:l_I-gb:s_1
Jamie,
Your comment only does you a disservice. It only devalues you in its thoughtlessness and infantile reacting.
Have you ever read the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Your opinion cannot change it to suit your prejudices though it protects your right to say dumb stuff like that.
peace.
Dear Natalie,
Thank you for your bravery and courage to post your speech/tell others your story. We will continue to fight for our civil liberties and the right to freedom of speech and lawful protest. You are commended!
It is unfortunate that some individuals have commented they way they have. Jamie from the Military should be removed from his job. He needs to reread and understand the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, under which he service. This government, many militant police officers and some members of our Canadian Forces are all about perpetuating FEAR. It is the misguided sense of power and authority that unfortunately results in such ignorant comments.
For those who focus on photos and comments, the very well articulated points have been lost … sad really. Unfortunately, most do not understand the full implications of the violence from the G8 and G20 police forces and government actions – on THEIR civil liberties. People may only change once their own personal freedoms and liberties are breached by such thugs.
Good for you for sharing all that you have written with “us” – I hardly recognized my city that weekend – and I hardly recognize my country these days.
All the best as you continue to speak out and heal.
Jamie – It’s sad to see that military training and (assumed) combat experience has depleted any sense of compassion or justice in you. Yes, you are fighting for her right to protest – even though you obviously disagree with her views – but that does not excuse your hope that real bullets will be used the next time. How would you feel if you were injured and somebody told you you got what you deserved because they did not agree with Canada’s military involvement in wherever it is that you are posted? (It is my prayer that you fulfill your military service without personal injury or the trauma of watching another soldier die in combat.)
What you fail to understand, perhaps from the content of the news reports you have seen or read, is that police marched upon and arrested with undue force not only the protesters who were demonstrating peacefully in a designated protest zone, but hundreds of people who were not involved with the protest for the most spurious of charges, detained them for hours without food, water, heat, or access to legal counsel, intimidated them from ever coming near a protest area again, and then released them after “dropping” the charges.
This is the sort of thing I could expect in the former Soviet Union, or present day China or Chile – but not in Canada.
These same police stood and watched – apparently under orders to stand down – as a small group of protesters broke away from the march and began to commit vandalism in the downtown core.
I’d like someone to tell me how and why this happened.
Check out some of the actual footage taken during the event, read some of the testimonies of the non-protesters, and then see if you hold the same opinion.
Natalie; the more I read about this whole situation, the more emotional I become. I am HORRIFIED at the actions of Police and Authorities, however, I am also HORRIFIED at the actions of Black Bloc on Saturday.
I am though proud of people like you, and Gretta’s son who are NOT afraid to stand up and denounce the activities that happened on Sunday.
I am also shocked by the narrow minded view that many people show; people like Jamie. and if you believe the opinion polls, many other Canadians.
I’m not an eloquent man, but it feels like bits and pieces of not just the Canadian expression of democracy are being snipped away, but the absolute meaning of the word is being held up like a gutted sock puppet to sheath the hungry men.
Remember that even though corporations are treated as ‘a person’, real people manage and work together to gain power. They are REAL people, but the two big monsters here are apathy and indifference. Hierarchical organizations are shock absorbers to the reality of these events.
The riot police saw your behavior as fringe and your actions as dangerous. They rationalized their retaliation, ipso facto; civilian body acts uncivil – act with brute force. But it was all veiled under the guise of protecting dignitaries.
When the people no longer have a voice and can influence even a representative democracy, it is because the catalyst of civil unrest has caused a cancer known as police state. A police state is the oldest form of government. It is billions of years old. Alpha males protecting other males and females from competitor tribes, brutalize their own people with their abuse and violence and perfidy.