Fairy Creek Protester Angela Davidson Sentenced to Jail for Civil Disobedience

A prominent protester and leader during the Fairy Creek old-growth logging protests was sentenced to jail time in Nanaimo, B.C., on Wednesday.

Angela Davidson, also known as Rainbow Eyes, received 60 days of jail time, after being convicted of seven counts of criminal contempt earlier this year, though she received credit for 12 days of time already served in pretrial detention.

Davidson, who is of the Da’naxda’xw First Nation and a deputy leader of the federal Green Party, was also ordered to do 75 hours of community service for her role in the protests.

She was found to be in breach of an injunction granted to logging company Teal Cedar, obtained after thousands of protesters occupied roads in the company’s logging zone in 2021, in what is regarded as the largest act of civil disobedience in Canada.

Though hundreds of prosecutions for criminal contempt collapsed as courts found that RCMP did not properly read the injunction to protesters, Davidson was handed a months-long sentence due to repeated violations of the injunction.

The 38-year-old was first arrested in May 2021, after she chained her neck to a gate. She was then told she was in breach of the injunction and instructed to leave by police.

When RCMP returned an hour later, she was still chained to the gate and she was arrested.

She later breached her bail conditions by returning to the area for a variety of reasons, according to the sentencing decision posted on Wednesday.

In three instances, according to the decision, she returned to protest the logging. Later, in November 2021, she returned to the injunction zone to deliver food, and then returned twice in January 2022 to join a search party for a missing person.

When asked about her part in the protests, Davidson said she would do it again to protect the planet and old-growth forests.

Just before she was sentenced, Davidson said that she believed she was acting in accordance with natural law and her beliefs, an argument used in court as she lobbied for minimal jail time and community service.

However, B.C. Supreme Court Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson said that an important factor in criminal contempt sentencing was the idea of “denunciation and deterrence” to prevent future contempt charges.

The judge said that Davidson’s sentence for each of her criminal contempt charges must be served consecutively, rather than concurrently, which resulted in a jail sentence longer than the one sought by the Crown.

More than 50 people showed up to rally outside the courthouse last month, when the sentencing hearing began, to show their support for Rainbow Eyes.

On Wednesday, a similar turnout of supporters included Green Party Leader Elizabeth May, who said the jail time that Davidson faced was a “disproportionate enforcement of justice.”

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