Close
Help
Login
Staff Login
Register
FR
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Add to Cart
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Conceptually similar
CP14874640 | Newsroom Ready: Montreal police told they must acknowledge racism, profiling within force
CP167419146 | Montreal police chief rejects street check moratorium despite racial profiling data
Placeline/People
City
Vaughan
Country
Canada
Montreal police told they must acknowledge racism, profiling within force
If the Montreal police force won't recognize racism and profiling within its ranks, then the problem of unfounded street checks won't be solved, citizens told the city's public security committee in impassioned testimony Friday. The emotional pleas to police and city officials followed the recent release of a report delivered by university researchers that reveals black, Arab and Indigenous people are stopped by police significantly more often than white people in Montreal. Montreal police deputy director Marc Charbonneau told the committee he accepted the report with "humility" and his force will come up with a policy governing how officers make street checks by March 2020. But he refused to talk of "racial profiling" or racism within the force.
Actions
Add to collection
Add to cart
Information
Source name:
The Canadian Press
Unique identifier:
CP14874829
Legacy Identifier:
n_Police-Street-Checks20191122T1544
Type:
Video
Duration:
2m29s
Dimensions:
1920px × 1080px 175.07 MB
Create Date:
11/22/2019 3:44:00 PM
Display aspect ratio:
16:9
Tags
Montreal
police
racial profiling
random checks
street checks