DAVE VASEY: My name is Dave Vasey. The other day, Thursday, following the indigenous sovereignty solidarity march, a friend of mine and myself were walking down by fence area, just checking out what a $1.2 billion fence looked like, and we had a couple marks that marked us as activists. We had a bag saying "homeland security" and another one saying a sticker "no olympics on stolen native land." The police grabbed us, began to ask for identification. And we were operating within the "know your rights" frame which it said you don’t need to provide identification to the police unless you’re under arrest. I continued to just say that I was not comfortable with providing my identification to the police. They said if I didn’t, I would be placed under arrest, and I was subsequently placed under arrest and held for five hours at the movie studio jail complex.
AMY GOODMAN: Did you ask why?
DAVE VASEY: I had asked and they said there was a new by-law in effect but they had done an illegal search on us the night before we were detained, the night before they illegally searched our bags even though we had said "we don’t consent to our bags being searched and we know this is illegal." I hadn’t heard of this by-law at all and was just operating under what the legal community have provided to protesters.
AMY GOODMAN: What are your plans now?
DAVE VASEY: We’ll be launching a lawsuit on Monday against the police for violating constitutionally-held rights.
AMY GOODMAN: A lot of people are surprised by this law. Is it a temporary law?
DAVE VASEY: I have no idea. I’m hoping it’s a temporary law but no one knows anything about the law at this point. Even the legal community when I spoke with them thy had no idea what the implications were. They didn’t even know how it was actually going to operate during the summit.
AMY GOODMAN: Dave Vasey, the first person arrested under the new law in Toronto that allowed police to detain anyone near the site of the G-20 summit if they fail to identify themselves or refused to allow their bags to be searched. The regulation was temporary for the G-20. It kicked in on June 21 and expired on June 28, the day after the summit ended.
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