A First Nations girl rejects accusations leveled towards her in a defamation lawsuit introduced earlier than the Yukon Supreme Court docket. Michelle Christine Cameron, who goes by Crystal Semaganis, submitted her assertion of defence on January 29.
Lawsuit Background
Semaganis faces claims of defamation for asserting that 4 ladies—two residing within the Yukon and employed with or for Indigenous communities—are falsely claiming Indigenous identification. The plaintiffs, sisters Amanda Buffalo, Krista Reid, Amaris Manderscheid, and their mom Louise Darroch, initiated the swimsuit in July 2025. They search damages exceeding $500,000 together with public retractions of Semaganis’s statements.
The assertion of declare particulars Semaganis’s analysis into the ladies’s backgrounds, figuring out they maintain Ukrainian heritage moderately than Indigenous ancestry. It describes Darroch’s adoption as an toddler right into a non-Indigenous household and her organic mom’s subsequent affirmation of their Indigenous roots.
Semaganis’s Defences
Semaganis denies making the alleged statements. She argues alternatively that any such feedback weren’t defamatory and qualify as truthful touch upon a public curiosity matter. She outlines efforts to confirm the ladies’s identities, together with discussions with households of elders cited by Amanda Buffalo as kin or identification affirmers in her educational work. These households reportedly disputed the accuracy of Buffalo’s claims, although Semaganis doesn’t determine the elders or households in her submitting.
Semaganis urges the court docket to dismiss the lawsuit completely.
Plaintiffs’ Reply
On February 6, the 4 ladies filed a reply difficult Semaganis’s defences. They assert that the elders referenced in Buffalo’s educational work consented to inclusion and a number of other even participated in her thesis defence. These counterclaims await judicial testing.

