The family of the 23-year-old Notre-Dame-de-Grâce (NDG) man who was shot and killed by police on Aug. 21 is suing the City of Montreal.
Nicholas Gibbs’ mother, sister and mothers of his three children are seeking $1,035,000 in moral damages and $100,000 in punitive damages. The Bureau des enquêtes indépendentes (BEI), Quebec’s independent police watchdog, is still investigating the incident.
The family is hoping it will lead to arrests.
“No mother should have to bury their kids, it’s not right, I want them to be charged,” Erma Gibbs said at a news conference with her three grandchildren.
“Every day I look in the face of these kids I think about their dad.”
The family also released an eyewitness video of the intervention.
In the video, five gunshots can be heard. Two of the shots were fired after Gibbs turned his back.
“What you can see in this video is never at any moment the police is trying to de-escalate the situation,” former police officer and activist Will Prosper said. “They’re doing the totally opposite.”
WATCH: The family of a 23-year-old man shot dead by police in August is looking for answers. As Global’s Anne Leclair reports, Nicholas Gibbs’ loved ones announced that they’re suing the City of Montreal for just over $1 million in damages.
READ MORE: Quebec’s watchdog investigates police shooting in NDG
Lawyers for the family claim police could have approached the situation differently, and they say officers should have addressed Gibbs in English. In the video, officers can be heard yelling, mostly in French.
“Everyone is talking French to him, this is in a anglophone neighbourhood and Nicholas is speaking in English and nobody at the beginning is speaking English with him,” Prosper said.
The family is also launching a crowdfunding campaign to cover court fees. According to Gibbs’ legal team, it isn’t considered a criminal act when police shoot and kill, therefore the family doesn’t have access to the same support others would when their loved one is murdered.
“For the police, not all of them are bad but they need to be trained properly,” Gibbs’ mother said while holding her granddaughter. “My son didn’t have to die like that.”