EXCLUSIVE: First Nation police chiefs want to participate in border security efforts

EXCLUSIVE: First Nation police chiefs want to participate in border security efforts

Spread the love

First Nation tribal police chiefs in Canada say want to participate in border security efforts. Many already are on the front lines, living at the U.S.-Canada border, they told The Center Square.

“National security doesn’t exist without First Nation policing at the border,” Dwayne Zacharie, president of First Nations Chiefs of Police Association, told The Center Square in an exclusive interview while participating in border security operations with Texas Operation Lone Star sheriffs. Zacharie also serves as Chief Peacekeeper of Kahnawake Peacekeepers located near Montreal.

One of the biggest problems First Nation communities face is a lack of funding and the Canadian government refusing to designate policing as essential services, he argues.

“We’re not regarded as essential service,” but considered “as an enhancement to” the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and other provincial police services, he said.

There are more than 630 indigenous communities in Canada and only 36 self-administered policing services, he says. The 35 serve roughly 150 indigenous communities; the RCMP and provincial police are supposed to serve the rest, he said. First Nation police receive roughly 40 percent less salaries than federal and provincial police organizations that “don’t share information with us, don’t provide us with opportunities for advanced training or resourcing commensurate with our needs,” he said.

As a result, he said he’s looking for help outside of Canada, including from U.S. federal, state and local partners to help him and First Nation police fight crime, including border crime.

“We’re going to find the partners that we need to have,” he said. He’s hoping new partnerships will help “because we do see the impacts in our communities as police officers. We see MS-13, the Sinaloa Cartel, Hell’s Angels and organized crime entities that come into our communities because in their minds, the picking is ripe because we don’t have the resources, we’re understaffed.”

President Donald Trump “has a different reality about the way he looks at things,” including telling Canadian authorities to improve border security, he said. Canada’s $1.3 billion border plan claims to surge resources to law enforcement but “First Nation policing didn’t see any influx of resources, didn’t see any upgrades in training,” Zacharie told The Center Square.

First Nation challenges are compounded by systemic underfunding and policies that led to multiple lawsuits. They’re using expired bullet proof vests, don’t have enough vehicles and safety equipment to perform their jobs, and can’t hire or retain personnel due to lack of resources, they say. Their working conditions “would never be accepted by the provincial police or the Montreal police or any other police department,” Shawn Dulude, president of the Quebec Association of First Nation and Inuit Police Directors, told City News.

In Quebec, 22 First Nation police officers filed a complaint against Public Safety Canada with the Canadian Human Rights Commission alleging “persistent underfunding of Indigenous police forces,” which has created serious security risks. This is after Pekuakamiulnuatsh First Nation sued Quebec officials arguing they underfunded their police for years. Canada’s Supreme Court ruled in their favor last year.

In British Colombia, the Heiltsuik Tribal Council also sued, arguing the RCMP aren’t protecting residents from organized crime, including drug trafficking and sexual violence. The region is dealing with cartel and CCP-related crime, The Center Square reported.

These problems are compounded by “a stigma attached to policing because of the old concepts and the way that the RCMP enforced the Indian Act, which created residential schools, which was a way to indigenous people and take their culture and their language and basically eradicate native people from the land,” Zacharie told The Center Square.

The 1876 Indian Act defined Indian status, created the reservation system and kept several colonial-era laws designed to “eliminate First Nations culture in favour of assimilation into Euro-Canadian society.” It “enabled trauma, human rights violations and social and cultural disruption for generations,” the Canadian Encyclopedia states.

Canadian police enforced a pass system regulating indigenous travel, a permit system regulating the sale of goods and farm equipment prohibitions on reservations.

From 1831 to 1996, more than 130 government-sponsored residential schools sought to “westernize” indigenous children. They were “overcrowded, underfunded, and rife with disease, leading to the deaths of many children, who were often buried in unmarked graves,” IndoCanada Professional explains. An estimated 150,000 children attended them; an estimated 6,000 died at them, the encyclopedia states.

In 1951, the Indian Act was amended to authorize the forcible removal of indigenous children. Now referred to as the “Sixties Scoop,” under the guise of “child welfare,” Canadian police accompanied “social workers” to forcibly take children from their parents, place them in non-indigenous foster care and adopt them out worldwide.

By the early 1980s, investigations were conducted; the Provincial Court of Manitoba detailed examples of “cultural genocide.” A class action lawsuit was filed by survivors, including those still searching for family members. In 2018, a settlement was approved.

The Indian Act also created an unequal legal status for women based on marital status. It was amended in 1985 to address the issue, which critics argue is still discriminatory.

Indigenous women were also forcibly sterilized in two provinces from 1928 to 1972.

Similar to the United States, thousands of indigenous women and girls suffer from violent crime and are missing, prompting national inquiries.

First Nation challenges are ongoing. In 2023, more than 100 First Nations sued the government for failing to provide housing and running water on reservations.

Zacharie is hoping with the help of Americans there’s a “chance for us to build a partnership … and educate people about the realities we are facing.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Vought testifies before lawmakers on Trump's $2.1T budget request

Vought testifies before lawmakers on Trump’s $2.1T budget request

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought met with U.S. lawmakers Wednesday to discuss the president’s $2.1 trillion budget proposal for the next fiscal...
SNAP eligibility changes spark debate on gap for impacted recipients

SNAP eligibility changes spark debate on gap for impacted recipients

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A coalition of non-profits and community organizations across the state are warning that more than 200,000 Illinoisans...
Trump puts spotlight on China, Iran's top oil consumer

Trump puts spotlight on China, Iran’s top oil consumer

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square With the blockade of Iranian ports moving toward its third day, China, Iran’s largest importer of oil, is vowing not to send weapons to the...
Lawmakers, auditors offer fraud prevention solutions

Lawmakers, auditors offer fraud prevention solutions

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Lawmakers and auditors called on the federal government to implement legislation preventing fraud in programs run by the state. The U.S. House Oversight Subcommittee on...
Illinois unions seek to kill Waymo-friendly bill in Springfield

Illinois unions seek to kill Waymo-friendly bill in Springfield

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Leadership and rank-and-file from multiple labor unions called on lawmakers to kill legislation aimed at welcoming autonomous...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Will County Animal Protection Services Advises Against Multi-Campus Shelter Model

Will County Public Health & Safety Committee Meeting | April 2, 2026 Article Summary: Following a request for research, the Will County Animal Protection Services administrator reported that Will County...
Will County Board Graphic.02

Executive Committee Advances $15,000 Strategic Plan Initiative

Will County Board Executive Committee Meeting | April 9, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board Executive Committee unanimously approved a $15,000 agreement with Leap HR Consulting to develop the...
Rich States Poor States: Tax policy largely determines states’ economic competitiveness

Rich States Poor States: Tax policy largely determines states’ economic competitiveness

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square No matter what a state offers in terms of natural beauty, work and social opportunities, tax and economic policy — as unglamorous as they sound...
Will County P&Z Logo Planning Zoning

P&Z Commission Overrides Staff Denials, Rescuing Special Use Permits for Joliet Wedding Venue and Romeoville Barge Terminal

Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Planning and Zoning Commission voted to overturn administrative denials for two delayed commercial projects—a...
Will County P&Z Logo Planning Zoning

Will County P&Z Commission Grants Extensions for Joliet Township Solar Farm Ground Cover

Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Planning and Zoning Commission unanimously granted a final deadline extension for a commercial solar...
Will County P&Z Logo Planning Zoning.2

P&Z Approves Lockport Bounce House Business Expansion

Will County Planning and Zoning Commission Meeting | April 7, 2026 The commission unanimously approved Zoning Case #ZC-25-137 for Victor H. Lule Huerta, owner of 3262 S. State Street in...
78 pro-life orgs ask DOJ to stop undermining state laws by favoring aborting drug industry

78 pro-life orgs ask DOJ to stop undermining state laws by favoring aborting drug industry

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America led 77 of its pro-life organization colleagues in sending the acting U.S. attorney general a letter asking the Department of...
Illinois Quick Hits: Two of ComEd four released; new trial expected

Illinois Quick Hits: Two of ComEd four released; new trial expected

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A U.S. appellate court has ordered two defendants in the ComEd Four case to be released pending...
Screenshot 2026-04-10 at 1.52.12 PM

Monee Celebrates Tractor Supply Grand Opening, Historia Coffee Launch, and Tree City USA Award

Monee Village Board Meeting | April 8, 2026 Article Summary: The Village of Monee recognized a surge in local commercial activity with the grand opening of a new Tractor Supply...
Will County Finance Logo

Will County Treasurer Seeks Policy on Cash Payments as U.S. Mint Discontinues the Penny

Briefs: Will County Board Finance Committee Meeting | April 7, 2026 Article Summary: With the U.S. Mint ceasing production of the penny, the Will County Treasurer's Office is asking the...