Canadian Press Covers Courthouse Incident and Calls for Independent Investigation and quotes Law360 piece (CP24, CTV etc) –Jan 28 2026

Canadian Press article found here:

https://www.ctvnews.ca/toronto/local/durham/article/cops-accused-of-assaulting-lawyer-at-oshawa-ont-courthouse-advocates-call-for-independent-probe/

https://www.cp24.com/local/durham/2026/01/28/cops-accused-of-assaulting-lawyer-at-oshawa-ont-courthouse-advocates-call-for-independent-probe/

Durham

Cops accused of assaulting lawyer at Oshawa, Ont., courthouse; advocates call for independent probe

By

The Canadian PressOpens in new window

Published: January 28, 2026 at 2:11PM EST

A Durham Regional Police officer’s logo emblem is shown at a Bowmanville, Ont. shopping centre parking lot on Tuesday Feb. 28, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Doug Ives (Doug Ives)

A national legal organization is calling for an independent investigation after a lawyer alleged police officers slammed her head into a desk, dragged her out of a room in handcuffs and hauled her to the basement cells at a courthouse in Oshawa, Ont., last week.

The Criminal Lawyers’ Association says the allegations against Durham Regional Police Service officers raise “serious human rights concerns,” and it would be inappropriate for the force to investigate its own officers.

Durham police have said they are investigating an incident that took place at the Superior Court of Justice in Oshawa shortly after 5 p.m. last Friday and that the allegations are being taken “with the utmost seriousness.”

In a statement issued by her counsel, defence lawyer Sudine Riley says uniformed officers “challenged her presence” in an interview room where she was catching up on legal work after finishing a trial.

Neha Chugh says her client, a petite Black woman who wears a headscarf, was spoken to with “rage, disrespect and contempt” by officers who slammed her head on the desk and put their knees in her back and neck, leaving her bleeding and swollen.

She says Riley was dragged out of the room, handcuffed and taken to the cells, during which her head scarf was ripped off and her skirt raised.

“She committed no offence other than being a Black woman practising law, being diligent about her commitment to the pursuit of justice,” Chugh said in the statement issued earlier this week.

“She was handled violently and aggressively by members of police services. She is taking time to rest and heal while she considers her next legal steps.”

Durham regional police are working with court services to obtain and review all available evidence related to the incident, a spokesperson said in a statement.

“DRPS has assigned the appropriate investigative and oversight resources to fully understand the circumstances and determine what further actions may be required,” the statement said.

The force said no additional information is available as the investigation continues.

The Criminal Lawyers’ Association said it has been providing Riley with support and is committed to ensuring she receives justice.

“All lawyers must be able to work in safety and security within Ontario’s courthouses,” the organization said in a statement.

“We recognize that racialized members of the bar have been disproportionately affected by these events, and we urge all stakeholders to take clear and meaningful action to protect our diverse bar and to address these deeply concerning allegations.”

Anita Szigeti, a Toronto lawyer and founder of the volunteer lawyer association Women in Canadian Criminal Defence, said she has never before seen such allegations in more than 33 years practising law in Ontario.

“This incident has cast a deep and very dark shadow over the lives of women in criminal defence,” she wrote on the legal news website Law360.

“This may very well be the final straw for many of what’s left of the women in our bar. For those who are Black or racialized, younger women in defence. Those who now legitimately and reasonably, ever so justifiably fear for their safety when they go to work every day.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 28, 2026.

Paola Loriggio, The Canadian Press

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About Anita Szigeti

• Called to the Bar (1992) • U of T Law grad (1990) • Sole practitioner (33 years) • Partner in small law firm (Hiltz Szigeti) 2002 - 2013 • Mom to two astonishing kids, Scarlett (20+) and Sebastian (20-) • (Founding) Chair of Mental Health Legal Committee for ten years (1997 to 2007) * Founding President of Law and Mental Disorder Association - LAMDA since 2017 * Founder and Secretary to Women in Canadian Criminal Defence - WiCCD - since 2022 • Counsel to clients with serious mental health issues before administrative tribunals and on appeals • Former Chair, current member of LAO’s mental health law advisory committee • Educator, lecturer, widely published author (including 5 text books on consent and capacity law, Canadian civil mental health law, the criminal law of mental disorder, a law school casebook and a massive Anthology on all things mental health and the law) • Thirty+ years’ experience as counsel to almost exclusively legally aided clients • Frequently appointed amicus curiae • Fearless advocate • Not entirely humourless
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