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Muskrat Falls protesters free of criminal charges

Five protesters arrested for trying to stop the Muskrat Falls hydroelectric project are now free of criminal charges related to a 2016 demonstration.

2 people have charges withdrawn, 3 acquitted after 2016 arrests

Emily Wolfrey was arrested in 2016 after demonstrating against the Muskrat Falls dam. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

Five protesters arrested for trying to stop the Muskrat Falls hydroelectric project are now free of criminal charges related to the 2016 demonstration.

For more than three years, Emily Wolfrey, a mother of two from Rigolet, had a charge of breaching a court order hanging over her head.

Today, she's celebrating freedom.

"It was a big relief," she said. "It was pretty stressful having it there for that period of time."

Wolfrey says she was in a designated "safe zone" when RCMP officers arrested her in October 2016.

She, and others, were accused of violating a court injunction ordering people not to trespass on the construction site, obstruct any traffic to or from the dam and they couldn't encourage others to do those things.

Prosecutors only recently decided she shouldn't have been charged in the first place, dropping her charge after acquitting three others and previously withdrawing another, according to her lawyer, Mark Gruchy.

Police on the scene that day were incensed by what she'd been yelling from the sidelines, she recalled.

"They didn't like what I was saying and they violently arrested me. They threw me up against one of the vehicles," she said, describing being surrounded by officers, one of whom she says grabbed her hand so hard it left bruises on her palm, injuring her thumb.

Gruchy said the Crown heard his concerns and "for its own reasons" chose to withdraw the charge against Wolfrey.

"Amongst all the cases that I've done, this has been one of the most emotional," he said, with everybody involved tied intricately to the land they wanted to protect from development.

A protester stands between Mohawk Warrior Society flags at a rail blockade in Tyendinaga, near Belleville, Ont., earlier this month. The protest is in solidarity with the Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs opposed to the LNG pipeline in northern British Columbia. (Lars Hagberg/The Canadian Press)

The Muskrat Falls cases echo sentiments felt across the country, he added, as blockades paralyze rail transportation in protest against police presence on Indigenous land in British Columbia.

Those types of demonstrations — and the way the justice system deals with them — are now resembling a pattern for Gruchy.

"We find ourselves in this situation where now injunctions are being vigorously deployed, usually by corporations," he said.

"That's extremely dispiriting to me and sad."

Wolfrey, while relieved she escaped legal repercussions for what she and Gruchy believe was an unfounded arrest, still recalled her decision to protest with a mixture of defiance and disappointment.

"I wasn't going to give in. I was going to stand my ground," she said.

"I've done this for my kids, so they can grow up living the way I lived, the way my parents lived, my grandparents lived," by hunting and foraging, using land-based resources in the region.

"But as of right now, we're getting poisoned," she said, referring to a projected rise in methylmercury levels in nearby waters caused by the Muskrat Falls project — a project she tried, in vain to stop.

"They can't live the way we lived," she said.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Here & Now and Labrador Morning