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Anti-racist activist asks court to ban threats by Ontario far-right figure

The Canadian Anti-Hate Network said it believed this was the first time activists had sought a peace bond in response to right wing extremist threats.
Kevin Goudreau, chairman of the Canadian Nationalist Front, says his group plans an "Anti-Trudeau/illegal immigration" rally in Peterborough. Global News Peterborough file

Frustrated by police inaction against an Ontario far-right figure, an anti-racist activist has asked the courts to issue a peace bond ordering him to stop making online threats.

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Richard Warman said he applied to the Ontario Court of Justice for a peace bond on June 3 after police repeatedly declined to lay charges against Kevin Goudreau.

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The application alleged Goudreau had “counselled violence” against the Canadian Anti-Hate Network. Warman is a board member of the group and told the court he feared for his safety.

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The RCMP has used peace bonds in recent years to impose strict conditions on extremists they suspect might attempt to leave Canada to join terrorist groups.

But the Canadian Anti-Hate Network said in a statement Thursday it believed this was the first time activists had sought a peace bond in response to right-wing extremist threats.

“We’re bringing a court application in Ottawa to hold Peterborough neo-Nazi Kevin Goudreau accountable for this threats,” read the statement posted on the anti-hate group’s Facebook page.

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The self-described chairman of a nationalist fringe group, who has a swastika tattooed on his chest, Goudreau was banned from Facebook in April as part of a crackdown on extremist content that followed the New Zealand mosque killings.

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In text messages to Global News, Goudreau dismissed the peace bond case, saying it would not succeed and that he would be seeking a peace bond against Warman “for stalking me.”

“It’s for an alleged threat against the Canadian Anti-Hate Network and not him personally, he’s a chronic complainer, whiner and criminal harasser, he has no legal grounds for a restraining order, it won’t go anywhere,” Goudreau said.

He denied counselling violence and said a disclaimer on his website indicated that “we don’t promote, advocate or incite hatred or violence by our members or anyone else.”

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But the latest post on Goudreau’s blog ends with the statement: “Kill your local drug dealer.” Goudreau responded that he was advocating for the death penalty.

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Warman, an Ottawa lawyer who has long fought online hate, wrote in his peace bond application that he had been monitoring Goudreau’s online activity for more than a decade.

“I have previously reported Goudreau’s threats of violence against others because it is my duty as a citizen and especially as a lawyer to protect the safety of others and uphold the law,” Warman wrote.

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He said a Facebook post following the March 15 terrorist attack on New Zealand mosques had “caused me to be concerned for my personal safety from Goudreau.”

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He said he also feared “any other person who may take action as a result of Goudreau counselling and inciting violence against me and my colleagues at the Canadian Anti-Hate Network.”

Warman wants the court to impose a 12-month peace bond ordering Goudreau to “not communicate threats of violence,” abstain from drugs and alcohol and keep 200 metres from Canadian Anti-Hate Network events.

Stewart.Bell@globalnews.ca

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