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Hockey P.E.I. dealing with appeals from suspended players in Mark Connors case

At least some of the five Prince Edward Island hockey players handed 25-game suspensions on Feb. 11 have filed appeals with Hockey P.E.I.

The appeals process must be completed within seven working days, the governing body has confirmed. If the players don't agree with the result, they could then appeal to Hockey Canada. 

Citing the young age of the players and the need to let the process run its course, nobody from Hockey P.E.I. would agree to do an interview with CBC News. 

The players were suspended and ordered to take anti-racism education after a virtual disciplinary hearing in the Mark Connors case.

He's the teenage goalie from Halifax who says the P.E.I. players directed repeated racial slurs at him from the stands of Simmons Sports Centre as he tended net during a game in Charlottetown at a tournament in November. 

From the start, the parents of the five western P.E.I. players identified as a result of the investigation have called Hockey P.E.I.'s disciplinary process unfair.

The parents say media reports — not to mention public statements deploring the alleged racist actions by both the governing body and P.E.I. Premier Dennis King immediately after Connors and his father spoke out — unfairly scapegoated their children before the process even began.

The parents and players were not identified in the report from Hockey P.E.I.'s discipline and ethics committee, with the governing body citing the fact that all the players were minors. CBC News reached out to members of the boys' community in an eventually unsuccessful attempt to find and interview the parents. 

But according to the written decision Hockey P.E.I. handed down last week, all the families said there was no supporting evidence that anything of a racist

Read more on cbc.ca
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