Protesters claim forestry company police illegally towing vehicles near BC old-growth blockade
Protesters opposing old-growth logging on Vancouver Island are accusing a logging company and the RCMP of underhanded tactics at the site of long-running blockades near Port Renfrew.
Protest group The Rainforest Flying Squad claims that tow trucks have illegally removed more than 40 vehicles from the area, and were impounded â" with a cost of $2,500 for their return.
Read more: Climate change cited as reason to deny injunction extension in B.C. old-growth dispute
The group is now taking logging company Teal-Jones to court over the issue.
âBy all means, if these vehicles were blocking roads then theyâve got a right to tow the and try to get damages for them,â lawyer Noah Ross told Global News.
âBut the vehicles that my clients that weâre proceeding to court on werenât blocking the roads and I guess weâre in court because of that disagreement.â
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Protesters say in addition to being illegal, the towing and impound fees they are being charged are punitive.
â$2,500 is a lot of money for anyone to pay â" and honestly, the car probably isnât even worth that much,â said a demonstrator who identified himself as Bozosapien.
1:53 Tensions escalate at Fairy Creek blockade Tensions escalate at Fairy Creek blockade â" Aug 22, 2021Teal-Jones defended the fees to Global News, saying removing vehicles from the site of the Fairy Creek blockade was not the same as towing a car in the city.
âThe cost of retrieving vehicles reflects the expense of towing vehicles out of a remote area, storage and security and the damage done to Teal-Jones,â the company said in a statement.
It comes as a B.C. Supreme Court judge hears arguments on whether or not to extend an injunction against demonstrators trying to block Teal-Jones from logging its timber licence in the area.
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Read more: BC RCMPâs acting commanding officer open to independent agency oversight after Fairy Creek protests
The company has applied for a one-year extension to the injunction, which is currently set to expire on Sept. 26.
On Thursday, Justice Douglas Thompson said he would consider new options to address the future of the injunction, and expressed concern about conflict between police and protesters at the site since Mounties began enforcing the order in May.
âPerhaps, the only thing everybody agrees upon right now is whatâs being done is not working,â said Thompson, who instructed lawyers to come to court Friday prepared to discuss the structure of the injunction.
About 1,000 people have been arrested at the site so far.
â" with files from the Canadian Press
© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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