Anthony Marriott, Survivor of Police Violence, Speaks About His Upcoming Book

Written by Layasha Devi

“I expected justice, but instead I was left angry, betrayed.”

Warning: Some content may be distressing for some readers 

At just 17 years old, Anthony Marriott was living the life of a normal teenager, done with school, going to work and on the way to pursue his dreams. An enthusiastic individual. However, one night he experienced something that you would not imagine a 17-year-old would go through. Anthony’s life changed right in front of his eyes that night when he had an unexpected encounter with the police. The members of a system that was meant to serve and protect the community disobeyed their mandates and badges, abusing their power. Anthony was put through the agony of police brutality, which had not only changed his life but him as well. Police brutality has affected many racialized and marginalized people across the globe. Anthony’s life flashed right in front of his eyes while he went through a painful and terrifying experience of torture. We are fortunate to have Anthony with us here to interview him and for him to share his experience with us. Today, Anthony Marriott is the Communications Coordinator of the Regis 4ever Foundation and a survivor of police violence. Anthony is a writer who currently has his autobiography in progress, based on his experiences. This book is meant to support the victims and survivors of police brutality, for Anthony to share his story, to address the critical issues in the system and advocate for improvements.

L: Welcome, Anthony. It is a pleasure to meet you. I wanted to ask you a few questions based on your experiences and your upcoming book. Feel free to take your time answering them and pause if you need to. Starting with our first question, at the time, you were 17 when this incident happened. As a 17-year-old, what were your perspectives on the criminal justice system before and after your encounter with the police? And what are your perspectives on the system now?

A: Thank you, Layasha, for having me do this interview with you. And to answer your question, before the incident, my view of the justice system was a little naive. I believed it was straightforward. If you do the right thing, you are safe. And if you do wrong, you face consequences. Looking back as a kid, I knew there were flaws, but I assumed the system worked the same for everyone. My encounter shattered that belief instantly. Waking from the coma, I expected justice, but instead I was left angry, betrayed, and with a profound lack of trust in law enforcement and the system. As I followed the broader trends of police brutality, I realized how deeply victims and their families suffer without answers. So today my perspective is much more nuanced. I do not see the issue as entirely black or white, nor do I believe all police officers are bad. I have met individuals within the system who generally try to do right. The reality is that we are dealing with an extremely complex, deeply messed up systemic infrastructure for so long that it affects everyone. It cannot be overhauled overnight. So realistically, progress will happen bit by bit. I explore this complexity further at the end of my book, admitting that while the situation in the system is a total mess, we must begin addressing these issues.

L: After this frightening experience, it must have had a long-lasting impact on you. How did you overcome the trauma you have faced from this incident?

A: Well, I don’t think I ever truly got over an experience like this, nor do I think I’m supposed to. For years, I’ve avoided the topic entirely because constantly recounting the events and feeling the need to prove my experience always left me drained and deeply re-traumatized. Two major turning points added to my healing. First, connecting with families of victims of police brutality, like Claudette Beals and Peter Korchinski, the parents of Regis Korchinski-Paquet, who do incredible work for police accountability through the Regis 4Ever Foundation, I saw I was not alone in my grief. Second, writing this book, the autobiography, was surprisingly powerfully therapeutic. I am still processing all this trauma, but I can now discuss it without letting it control my emotions. Chapters 7 and 8 were the most powerful and painful to write, but I believe that will be the most relatable and impactful to readers.

L: Thank you very much. After your autobiography is released, what do you hope for your future audience to gain from it and the impact for it to have on the community?

A: If readers would take away just one message, I hope it’s that regardless of our demographic, age, gender, or race, we share a core humanity. We must dismantle the foolish prejudice that divides us and work collectively to reform this terribly flawed system that currently costs both human lives and billions of dollars. It just makes no sense. For marginalized communities, including but not limited to First Nations and Black communities who unfortunately bear the heaviest burden of these systemic inequalities, I want this book to move beyond passive conversation. I hope it builds active networks of solidarity aimed at meaningful police reform, like setting initiatives to bring police involved deaths down. Reallocating police budgets to community services or resources, or victim & victim family support, and community healing. Bonuses to police stations with the least discharged firearms. There are many more ideas like this I explore in my book. Even if readers disagree with some of my points, if it gets people talking, even if they disagree, I’ll call it a win.

L: Thank you again, Anthony. Media coverage of police encounters often reduces victims to headlines or statistics. How does your book reclaim your personal narrative from how the public might have first heard about you?

A: The media often flattens a person’s entire life into a 30-second news clip or a single-sided polarizing headline. While this book made me take the microphone back, readers will see me not just as a victim of an incident at 17, but as a son, a friend, a writer, and a human being who existed before the trauma and continues to grow after it.

L: Thank you. For a young person reading your book, who might currently feel powerless or fearful of the system, what is your direct message to them?

A: My message to them is that your fear is valid and your voice has immense power. Being young does not mean your observations are always incorrect or that your experiences do not matter. Channel your anger and fear into learning, into joining community programs or events, even just taking the time to relax and do some art, or just taking some time out to mentally organize your life and/or routines. The system wants you to feel isolated, but finding your village is where your protection and your journey begins to get more powerful.

L: Thank you, Anthony. I appreciate you for taking your time out to join us today. We are very much looking forward to your book and reading it after its release. I really do hope many get the opportunity to get a hold of your book, make meaningful connections as they read, and see the positive impact it will make in the community. Thank you for joining us today, and we wish you all the best.

A: Thanks again, Layasha. I appreciate it.

L: No problem. Thank you again.

Layasha Devi (She/Hers)

Member of Regis 4Ever Foundation 

Press Conference at Ontario Legislature: Justice for Regis – Anniversary Death

A press conference will be held at the media studio inside the Legislative Assembly of Ontario on Regis’ Anniversary Death May 27th from 9 to 9:30 AM. This moment is an important opportunity to bring public attention to the inquest process for this police involved death and the broader demands for accountability, transparency, and systemic change.

Family members, along with their advocates, will be speaking directly to the public and media. Their voices remain central to this work. For years, they have carried the weight of grief while continuing to demand answers, justice, and meaningful change. This press conference creates space for them to speak on their own terms—about the impacts of loss, the failures of existing systems, and the urgent need for alternatives that prioritize care and safety.

The upcoming inquest is a critical public process. Coroner’s inquests are meant to examine the circumstances surrounding a death and to generate recommendations aimed at preventing future harm. But for families, they are also about truth-telling, recognition, and ensuring that what happened is neither minimized nor forgotten.

This press conference at Queen’s Park signals that the community will be watching closely. It affirms that the inquest is not just a legal procedure—it is part of a broader struggle for justice led by families, communities, and advocates across Canada.

We invite community members, allies, and media to pay attention, share this moment, and continue to stand with the family.

Justice for Regis. Always.

#JusticeForRegis #Regis4Ever #SayHerName

Donate Now to be a Sponsor for the PURPLE Affair Gala 2026!

Help us support families and make communities safer.

The Regis 4Ever Foundation was created to honour Regis Korchinski-Paquet and to help families affected by violence across Canada. We provide support through advocacy, community programs, and direct assistance, ensuring no family faces these challenges alone.

We are raising funds for our 2026 P.U.R.P.L.E. Affair Gala on {NEW DATE}, November 28th, 2026, which is essential for keeping our programs running throughout the year. Please consider purchasing a $70 ticket through Eventbrite.

Make a Donation Today
Your donation directly helps families and community projects.

$50 provides meals, clothing, and essential supplies.
$150 supports youth programs and mentorship.
$500 helps families take part in national advocacy and healing spaces.
Every contribution, no matter the size, helps make a difference.

Donate here:
https://www.zeffy.com/en-CA/donation-form/purple-affair-gala

We also welcome sponsors and prize donations for the event.

Together, we can honour Regis’ legacy and build a future of care, justice, and community.
regis4everfoundation@outlook.com

The Story of Regis Korchinski-Paquet Documentary Screening & Panel Discussion

We’re honoured to invite you to a documentary screening and panel discussion – The Story of Regis Korchinski-Paquet, a 29 year old Canadian Indigenous-Black woman whose life was cut short because of the harmful actions of the Toronto police. This event will spark powerful public conversations about black lives, police accountability, community care, and transformative justice.

Event:

The Story of Regis Korchinski-Paquet Documentary Screening & Panel Discussion
Date: Friday, February 20, 2026
Time: 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM (doors open at 5:30)
Location: Wildseed Centre for Arts and Activism (Multipurpose room) – 24 Cecil St, Toronto, Ontario

This emotionally powerful documentary created by MadLab Press reflects on Regis’s life and the circumstances surrounding her death – an incident that ignited national dialogue about policing, racial justice, and community safety. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion with the Korchinski family, community advocates, educators, and people with lived experience to deepen our understanding and explore community-based alternatives to harm.

Get your tickets for only $30 each (includes a meal): Get Tickets

We encourage you to join us for this impactful evening of storytelling, reflection, and collective learning as we honour Regis’s memory and work toward a more just and caring society.

Sincerely,

The Regis 4Ever Foundation

Reflections from Our Placement Students

(This is the first in a series of monthly blogs the R4F will be sharing)

Hi, I’m Jana Rehou

I’m a 23-year-old from Toronto, Ontario. For a long time, I never imagined I’d be writing anything like this, let alone as a college student studying Community and Justice. There was a time when my only goal was to survive the day in front of me, not to plan for a future that felt completely out of reach.

When School Felt Impossible

Growing up, life didn’t follow a smooth or predictable path. I made choices I’m not proud of: dropping out of high school, surrounding myself with people who weren’t good for me, and repeating the same patterns because I didn’t know how to break them. College felt like something meant for other people—people who were more stable, more focused, more “deserving” than me.

Most days, I wasn’t thinking about applications, programs, or careers. I was thinking about getting through the next 24 hours. At the time, it felt like my mistakes were my identity, and I carried that weight into every decision I made.

Learning That Mistakes Don’t Define You

Looking back now, I can see that those difficult years were shaping me in ways I didn’t understand. They taught me resilience, self-awareness, and the importance of taking responsibility for my own growth. I learned that while we can’t erase our past, we can choose what we do with it.

The turning point for me was realizing that my story didn’t have to end where it started. I could decide, at any moment, to write a different chapter. Growth often comes from our lowest moments, and accepting that helped me move from shame to action.

Finding My Place at Humber College

Today, I’m in my fourth semester at Humber College, studying Community and Justice. Even now, that still feels surreal to say. I went from believing education was impossible for someone like me to actively building a life rooted in purpose, advocacy, and change.

Being in school has given me more than grades or credits. It has given me structure, stability, and a sense of belonging. It has also opened doors I never would have known existed, like my placement with the Regis 4Ever Foundation, which has been one of the most powerful experiences of my life so far.

The Work of the Regis 4Ever Foundation

The Regis 4Ever Foundation was created in 2020, following the death of Ukrainian Canadian Afro-Indigenous woman Regis Korchinski Paquet. The foundation supports families affected by police-related deaths and works toward truth, accountability, and systemic change. It is a grassroots organization powered by community care, love, and the refusal to accept silence or injustice.

Through my placement, I’ve had the opportunity to support this work in hands-on and deeply personal ways. One of my main roles is helping organize the annual Celebration of Life event in Toronto. This event brings people together to honor the lives lost, uplift grieving families, and create a space for healing through music, food, children’s activities, and community speakers who remind us why this work matters.

I also assist families in accessing resources and connecting them with support networks—whether that’s emotional, practical, or financial. Another part of my work involves amplifying advocacy campaigns such as #JusticeForRegis and #SayHerName through social media and community outreach. Additionally, I help promote the Regis Korchinski-Paquet Scholarship, which supports BIPOC youth pursuing education and leadership opportunities.

How This Work Changed Me

This experience has changed the way I see myself, my community, and the kind of impact I want to have. It has reminded me that community care matters—that justice work is not just policy or headlines, but real people, real families, and real grief. It has shown me that healing and resistance often happen side by side: in the same rooms, at the same events, in the same conversations.

At my core, I am someone who cares deeply about social justice and about people who have been overlooked, dismissed, or pushed aside by systems that claim to support them. Now that I have more stability in my life through education and routine, I feel a responsibility to give back. I want to stand with people whose stories are too often ignored and help create spaces where they are heard, believed, and supported.

Turning Hardship Into Purpose

My past doesn’t disappear just because I’m in college now. The girl who dropped out of high school and felt stuck in a cycle of mistakes is still part of me, but she is no longer the one in control. Instead, she is a reminder of how far I’ve come and why I refuse to take any of this for granted.

Turning hardship into purpose has become one of the most meaningful parts of my journey. I want others with stories like mine to know that their past does not disqualify them from a meaningful future. You can start over at 18, 35, or 60. You can get up and choose a different path.

If there is one thing my journey has taught me, it’s this: you are allowed to rewrite your story. And sometimes, the chapters you’re most ashamed of become the very ones that give your voice its strength.

PURPLE Affair Gala 2026

The Regis 4ever Foundation is pleased to announce that the PURPLE Affair Gala in honour of Regis Korchinski-Paquet will be happening again on November 28th, 2026. The early bird tickets are now on sale through Eventbrite for only $70. You don’t want to miss this exciting event to learn, dance, laugh, network, win prizes, and build community-based solutions for real community safety and justice.

The event will include amazing entertainment and a full meal cooked by volunteers. There will be many opportunities to network and contribute to social justice initiatives throughout Canada, and call for an end to police violence.

This opportunity to purchase a gala ticket is something you may want to get for a holiday gift. And maybe your own business or someone you know would be willing to be a sponsor. Visit our webpage for more details. Please get in contact with us if you are willing and interested at regis4everfoundation@outlook.com.

Thank you!

Planning Committee

Welcome To The Regis 4Ever Foundation!

Donations can be sent by E-transfer to: donations@regis4everfoundation.org. Every donation makes a huge difference to support victims and families of police violence with legal support, hosting awareness raising events, community dinners, clothing drives, peer counselling, and attending conferences or advocacy meetings.

Since the death of Regis Korchinski-Paquet at the hands of the Toronto Police Service on May 27, 2020 her friends and family have been fighting for justice.

In 2020, people took to the streets in cities across North America – demanding justice in response to ongoing police murders. Advocates and community members joined us in the struggle for justice, healing, and systemic change.

A call to 911 should not put anyone at risk. But that is exactly what happens when police attend emergency calls – Regis is one of far too many people killed by police across North America.

The Regis 4Ever Foundation continues to support families impacted by police violence and murder across Canada. No family should face what Regis’ family has faced in the years since her unjust murder.

Territorial Acknowledgement

Regis Korchinski-Paquet was an Afro-Indigenous & Ukrainian woman killed by the Toronto Police Service.

The Regis 4Ever Foundation primarily works in Toronto, also known as Tkaronto, and we acknowledge the current treaty holders, the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, and the principles which underpin the Dish with One Spoon Treaty, an agreement held by the Anishinaabe, Mississaugas and Haudenosaunee.


#JusticeForRegis #Regis4Ever #SayHerName

Subscribe to our Newsletter!

Subscribe to our newsletter to get the latest stories in your inbox.