- Premier & Cabinet Aide #1: Are the police there?
- Government Official #2: Of course.
- Premier & Cabinet Aide #1: Well...
- Government Official #2: It's not that simple. There's a land claim.
- Premier & Cabinet Aide #1: Well, of course there's a land claim, there's always a land claim.
- Judas George: You oughta respect our perimeter.
- OPP Police Officer #1: You're perimeter? This is a provincial park.
- Judas George: It's also a burial ground. And somebody put a horse shoe pit on some of our graves! How'd you like it if we put a horse shoe pit on the cemetery in town?
- OPP Police Officer #4: We had a plan, you know. We thought, if we could get five or six cases of beer, we could bait them. Big net and a pit.
- OPP Police Officer #5: Creative thinking!
- [joking about ending the takeover]
- Ted Abraham: Cops look pretty hunkered down over there.
- Judas George: Ah, it's all a big dance, anyway. OPP gotta stick out their chest, act tough for the public. We gotta do this crap just to get noticed. Great country, eh?
- Dudley George: Hey! What'd you bring me, huh?
- Carolyn George: Lots of healthy stuff: ding dongs, wagon wheels, root beer.
- Dudley George: Perfect!
- Clifford George: When I came back in '45, there was a fence around the place. All the houses were gone. There was this big goof standing at that guard house, telling me I couldn't come in! Had to sleep in the ditch that night. Not the first time I did that.
- [telling history of the park]
- Government Official #2: They could have a legal claim.
- Premier & Cabinet Aide #1: We are not going to negotiate a land claim with a gun pointed at our heads! There's a legal process in this country. Look, I don't understand why we can't just order the police to go in there and get them out?
- Government Official #1: Because, the police are not the government's private Army.
- Premier & Cabinet Aide #2: The police uphold the law; these people are breaking the law.
- Government Official #2: We have information, dating back to the 1930s that suggests a burial site does exist there!
- Premier & Cabinet Aide #2: They could take over the whole province on that basis.
- Sam George: So... are we grandstanding or what?
- Murray Klippenstein: Well, if we are, we aren't going to be doing it much longer. The government just filed a motion to strike one of the names off our list.
- Carolyn George: Only one?
- Murray Klippenstein: Well, they can go through everyone named in the lawsuit. Dispute each name one at a time. Problem is every time they file a motion, it costs us about 15-grand to fight it. This could put us in the poor house before this thing even gets started.
- Sam George: Yeah, well, I'm an Indian. They don't know how poor I can get.
- Ted Abraham: Where would those bastards get their hands on an AK-47? I mean, they got kids running around down there lucky enough to have shoes.
- Dale Linton: Some of them are hunters and trappers. They own guns! We know that.
- Ted Abraham: Look, I'm telling you, there are no guns in the park. I looked in the vehicles!
- Dale Linton: Kiosk?
- Ted Abraham: Yeah, some people got their sleeping bags rolled up out there.
- Police Field Commander: Any outside agitators?
- Ted Abraham: Yeah, me.
- Judas George: They said that they found no bullet marks in any of the police vehicles or equipment, at all. We were 50 feet from them. You think if we had guns we'd missed them?
- Dale Linton: List of names we got from Ted Abraham, includes several with criminal records.
- Police Field Commander: I saw it was a couple of DUIs, juvenile arson.
- Dale Linton: There are assaults, as well.
- Police Field Commander: No, my point is, it's the same profile you'd get of my kids high school, if you looked.
- Judas George: Seems we've been real humble waiting 50 years for this land to come back to us. We trusted they'd give it back.
- Michael: Why does it have to be like this?
- Judas George: Well, sometimes you have to make a stand for what you believe in.
- Ian Scott: Twenty-eight blunt trauma wounds. A man is beaten so severely that his heart stopped. With all these highly trained police officers present, no one in the crowd management unit is able to recall striking Slippery George?
- Marcel Beaubien: I may have swung by baton, but I'm not certain I made contact.
- Ian Scott: Did you see any other offices strike out and hit him?
- Marcel Beaubien: No sir.
- Ian Scott: Can you help us out at all, as to why Slippery George had to be hospitalized after his arrest?
- Marcel Beaubien: I have no information on that.
- Marcel Beaubien: We were definitely under attack. A Molotov cocktail landed right beside me. I saw about an inch of amber liquid in the bottom, the rag sticking out of the top.
- Ian Scott: You saw that the liquid was amber, in the dark?
- Marcel Beaubien: Yes.
- Ian Scott: I take it there was no explosion?
- Marcel Beaubien: No.
- Ian Scott: You didn't mention any of this in your notes. No one on either side recalls seeing something like this.
- Marcel Beaubien: I had an independent recollection.
- [courtroom laughs]
- Sam George: Been through a lot of things together, you and me. Good times, bad times. I know you're tired. So I'm gonna send you home. Sleep all you want. I, I want you to tell mom and dad I said hi and, I guess I'll see you on the other side, some day. I love you Dudley.
- Sam George: [imagining a conversation with Dudley] I should've been there with you, in the park, when you asked me to.
- Dudley George: At the parking lot?
- Sam George: Yeah.
- Dudley George: That would've been funny! That would've been funny! This is you on your one crutch, trying to fight them cops. Stand still so I can hit you!
- Sam George: Such a pain in the ass, you know that!
- Dudley George: I know.