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Mistaken arrest of Black teen a case of racial profiling, family says | CBC News Loaded
Dave Bosveld says his 17-year-old godson was driving in north Toronto on March 31 when vehicles started ramming his car and boxing him in. The teen was dragged from the car and handcuffed by undercover officers from Peel and Toronto. Except the teenager wasn't who police thought they were arresting.
Jane Gerster, Lauren Pelley · CBC News · Posted: Apr 05, 2021 5:00 AM ET | Last Updated: April 6
A Toronto family is pressing police for answers after a bungled arrest left a 17-year-old "traumatized" in what it believes was a case of racial profiling. 
Dave Bosveld says his godson was driving near Don Mills Road and Finch Avenue on March 31 when other vehicles started ramming his car and boxing him in. 
The tail end of the encounter — including the audible crack of what Bosveld says was a flashbang grenade — was captured on video that's since spread over social media. It shows a person lying face down on the ground.
Bosveld says his godson, who is not being named by CBC News as he is a minor, was dragged from the car and handcuffed by undercover officers from Peel Regional Police and the Toronto Police Service. He was taken to the hospital, where Bosveld says he was treated for "scratches and bumps and bruises all over his body."
Except the teenager wasn't who police thought they were arresting.
Peel police told CBC that officers thought they were apprehending 21-year-old Kwami Garwood, who is wanted on charges of first-degree murder by Toronto police and on charges of kidnapping by Peel police.
Instead, they arrested the teenager. And Bosveld says his family is reeling. 
"They're in a lot of pain right now. They can't imagine how this could have happened to their son and they want justice and they want accountability," he said.
Police released the teenager, but not before charging him with breaching a court condition not to drive. The condition stemmed from the teen driving without a licence when he was younger.
"It's entirely irrelevant to the incident," Bosveld said of the charge, "and it really goes to show how disconnected from their behaviour these police are."
Const. Danny Marttini, a spokesperson for Peel police, called the incident "regrettable."
She told CBC that officers received information that Garwood was in the area. Marttini said police felt the information was "credible and wanted to act" because he is known to be armed and dangerous. 
"We never want to arrest the wrong person," said Marttini. "We can only act with the information we are given." She said the officers were "acting in good faith."
WATCH | CBC's Lauren Pelley reports on a Black teenager mistakenly arrested:
But even that is worrisome, said Bosveld.
"If their suspect has done the things they're alleging he's done, we should all be very concerned that this is the best police work they could come up with — arresting a 17-year-old Black child that looks nothing like the actual suspect."
In a statement released Monday, Peel police said it regrets the mistake "and the distress this has caused this young man and his family."
"While our officers were acting in good faith on credible information, it does not negate that this was a traumatic experience," police said. "An internal review is underway to examine the events leading to this incident."
Bosveld is deliberate when referring to his godson as a youth, a child, a kid, or a boy.
"Our children, Black children, are not allowed their childhood," he said. 
Bosveld describes his godson as "a fun-loving guy." The high school student would have sleepovers with Bosveld's son, play basketball with his friends and has "been referred to as a big teddy bear."
The family is "crushed right now," he said, but "they're such a strong family, so they're going to get through this and they're going to want to hold people accountable for what happened here."
He said there is some relief, at least, that the teenager survived, and that "we're not doing an autopsy on a 17-year-old kid."
That's a reality Bosveld has been thinking of now, in particular as Derek Chauvin, a white police officer charged in the death of George Floyd, a Black man, is on trial.
Floyd's death in Minneapolis last May sparked global outrage after a video showed Chauvin pressing his knee on Floyd's neck for nearly nine minutes.
"You've got layers and layers of trauma and in seeing Black bodies harmed by this institution, the police, and now it's here at your doorstep," Bosveld said.
Peel police have a chance, he said, to show they're sincerely committed to doing right by Black people. 
Last fall, the force — which was recently ordered to pay $35,000 to the family of a six-year-old Black girl who officers handcuffed at school — signed a memorandum of understanding with the Ontario Human Rights Commission designed to root out systemic racism within the force.
The 17-year-old's family has launched a crowdfunding campaign to help hire a lawyer in order to seek answers.
Their quest presents an opportunity for Peel police to show they take racism seriously, Bosveld said, and to explain how they plan to "make this family whole."
Const. Marttini said police have been in touch with the family, although she declined to provide specifics.
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"Black Russians" redirects here. For the cocktail, see Black Russian.
Afro-Russians (Russian: Афророссияне, romanized: Afrorossiyane) or Black Russians are people of African descent that have migrated to and settled in Russia. The Metis Foundation estimates that there were about 50,000 Afro-Russians in 2009.[1]
Representatives of African peoples in the Russian language are commonly called negry.[2] The word negr comes from Spanish: negro (the color black in spanish) through other European languages (German: Neger, French: nègre). In the Russian language the word does not carry a negative connotation.[2][3]
There was never an observable number of people of African descent in Russia, even after Western European colonization of the continent. For centuries Russia was too isolated to interact with Africa. Russia's non-involvement in the colonization of Africa or the Atlantic slave trade prevented it from developing significant relationships with African tribes or colonies. Despite this, Abram Petrovich Gannibal, a Russian of African descent, became a general and nobleman in the Russian Empire. After being kidnapped from Logone (in contemporary Cameroon) by Ottoman forces as a boy, he was sold to Russian diplomat Fedor Golovin[4] in 1704 and gifted to Tsar Peter the Great, who freed and adopted him.[4][5] As an adult, he rose to nobility, and served the Russian Empire in both civil and military capacities.[5] He is also a maternal great-grandfather to the famed Russian poet Alexander Pushkin.[4]
After the revolution several African-American families came to the Soviet Union under the auspices of the Comintern. Among them were Oliver John Golden and his wife Bertha Bialek, bringing with them a group of 16 Afro-American experts in the cultivation of cotton; well-known African-American poet Langston Hughes with a group of 22 filmmakers; Paul Robeson with his family; and many others. Some of them stayed in Russia and their descendants still live there.[citation needed]
When African nations gained independence from colonialism, the Soviet Union offered scholarships to young people from these nations. About 400,000 Africans studied in the former Soviet Union between the late 1950s and 1990.[6] The first significant arrival of Africans was for the 6th World Festival of Youth and Students held in Moscow in 1957. The mixed race African descended children were called festival children because of their appearance, timing of their birth, and lack of a father figure. Many Africans also attended the Peoples' Friendship University of Russia.
^ Gribanova, Lyubov "Дети-метисы в России: свои среди чужих" Archived 4 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian). Nashi Deti Project. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
^ a b "Негры". Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary: In 86 Volumes (82 Volumes and 4 Additional Volumes). St. Petersburg. 1890–1907.;
Negr Archived 24 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine // Dictionary of the Russian Language (Ozhegov): (first edition 1949, the reference to the edition of 1992 together with Natalia Shvedova).
^ This article includes content derived from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 1969–1978, which is partially in the public domain.
^ a b c Grinberg, Miriam (2009). "Pushkin and Gannibal: Ethnic Identity in Imperial Russia". The Gettysburg Historical Journal. 8: 61.
^ a b Catharine Theimer Nepomnyashchy; Nicole Svobodny; Ludmilla A. Trigos (2006). Under the Sky of My Africa: Alexander Pushkin and Blackness. Northwestern University Press. pp. 31, 47–49, 56, 63, 74. ISBN 0810119714.
^ Lily Golden & Lily Dixon "TV project «Black Russians»". Africana Project. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
^ Timur Ganeev (17 April 2012). "Russia's Olympic team becomes more diverse". Retrieved 16 August 2012.
^ "Ганнибал Иван Абрамович – Личности". www.korabel.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 16 June 2020.
^ I support Kenyans by the call of my blood
^ Eric Foner, "Three Very Rare Generations" (review of Soul to Soul), The New York Times, December 13, 1992.
^ Лебамбу ноги кормят
^ Narizhnaya, Kristina. "A Russian milestone: 1st black elected to office – World news – Europe – msnbc.com". MSNBC. Archived from the original on 27 July 2010. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
^ "Der erste schwarze Stadtrat Russlands – News Ausland: Europa". tagesanzeiger.ch. Retrieved 7 August 2010.
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