Canadian Justice, Indigenous Injustice

Canadian Justice, Indigenous Injustice: The Gerald Stanley and Colten Boushie Case is a 2019 nonfiction book by Kent Roach, a law professor at the University of Toronto[1] about the trial of Gerald Stanley, who was found not guilty of the 2016 killing of Colten Boushie—a twenty-two-year-old resident of the Red Pheasant First Nation by an all-white jury in an infamous court case in Battleford, Saskatchewan.

University of Toronto law professor, Kent Roach, who is the author of public policy books—The Supreme Court on Trial and Due Process and Victims' Rights which were on the short list for the Donner Prize,[2] wrote Canadian Justice, Indigenous Injustice in 2019.

[1] A Canadian Law Library Review (CLLR) review of the 2022 paperback edition of the book, which included a new preface by Roach, said the book was a "valuable investigation" of how indigenous people experience the Canadian justice system.

[4][5] Roach focused on the "historical, political, social, and legal" aspects of the case, according to a Quill and Quire review.

[7] A CBC News' article cited the book, saying that the trial jurors did not receive enough instructions on how to handle a hang fire defence.