Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond removed from Order of Canada after Indigenous ID questions
CTV
Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, a high-profile former judge embroiled in a controversy surrounding her claims to Indigenous identity, has been removed from the Order of Canada at her own request.
Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, a high-profile former judge embroiled in a controversy surrounding her claims to Indigenous identity, has been removed from the Order of Canada at her own request.
A notice in Saturday's Canada Gazette, the federal government's official newspaper, says her appointment was terminated on Sept. 26 following her request and the Governor General's approval.
A social media post by the Indigenous Women's Collective, which had called for her removal, says "stealing Indigenous intergenerational trauma and identities brings very real consequences" and the group thanks the Governor General for "correcting a wrong."
Turpel-Lafond was appointed to the Order of Canada in 2021.
She has also returned honorary degrees from several universities, including Simon Fraser University, Brock, and two Vancouver Island schools, while McGill, Carleton and the University of Regina have rescinded awards granted to her.
An investigation by the CBC in fall 2022 found evidence that called into question Turpel-Lafond's claims of Indigenous identity.
The former B.C. representative for children and youth previously told the public broadcaster that while she was growing up she didn't question the biological parentage of her father, who she has said was Cree.