Close X
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Halifax Police Apologize To Black Community For Pain Caused By Street Checks

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Nov, 2019 11:20 PM

    Halifax's police chief has issued a formal apology to Nova Scotia's black community today over the practice of street checks.

     

    Chief Daniel Kinsella says police are sorry for actions that have caused pain, mistreatment and victimization.

     

    Kinsella says while decades of injustices can't be undone, police are committed to doing better in the future.

     

    He says his hope is the apology shows the black community that police are committed to change.

     

    The Nova Scotia government announced it would permanently ban the practice last month after retired chief justice Michael MacDonald issued a formal opinion that it is illegal as practised in Nova Scotia.

     

    MacDonald's analysis concluded the practice of randomly stopping citizens, taking down information and then retaining it in files contravenes citizens' constitutional and common law rights.

     

    During the October meeting of the board of police commissioners, the chief said it would take time to improve the police force's relationship with the black community — and that street checks was only one of the areas he's working on.

     

    When the 54-year-old chief took over the job in July, he said in his opening speech that he intended to build a "platform of trust" with the city's minorities.

     

    A study by University of Toronto criminologist Scot Wortley released earlier this year found African Nova Scotians in the Halifax area were more than five times more likely to be stopped by police. The street checks were found to have had a "disproportionate and negative" impact on the black community.

     

    An internet-based community survey conducted for the study indicated "overall confidence in law enforcement is relatively high," but noted that just 28 per cent of black respondents "trust the police."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Lights, Displays To Make Surrey’s Tree Lighting Festival Twinkle On Nov. 23

    Presented by Coast Capital Savings, the Surrey Tree Lighting Festival returns to Surrey's Civic Plaza on Saturday, November 23, 2019.

    New Lights, Displays To Make Surrey’s Tree Lighting Festival Twinkle On Nov. 23

    Virtual Reality Teaching About N.S. Group Home Abuse Transforms Shame Into Respect

    Virtual Reality Teaching About N.S. Group Home Abuse Transforms Shame Into Respect
    "It makes me shake my head .... They're just kids, and they're having to struggle through so much," Ofume told the 59-year-old former resident of the home last week.

    Virtual Reality Teaching About N.S. Group Home Abuse Transforms Shame Into Respect

    Man Dies After Being Pulled From Burning East Vancouver Commercial Building

    Man Dies After Being Pulled From Burning East Vancouver Commercial Building
    VANCOUVER - One man has died in an intense fire in a commercial building in east Vancouver.    

    Man Dies After Being Pulled From Burning East Vancouver Commercial Building

    Canadian Entrepreneur And Cirque Du Soleil Co-Founder Guy Laliberte Taken Into Custody In Tahiti Over Cannabis Growth

    MONTREAL - Canadian entrepreneur Guy Laliberte, founder of the Cirque du Soleil circus company, has been taken into custody in French Polynesia over claims of cannabis cultivation, his company said Wednesday.    

    Canadian Entrepreneur And Cirque Du Soleil Co-Founder Guy Laliberte Taken Into Custody In Tahiti Over Cannabis Growth

    Don't Count On Me To Support Western Demands: Bloc Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet

    OTTAWA - Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet says anyone seeking more independence for the West in the hopes of promoting the oil and gas sector should not come to him for advice.

    Don't Count On Me To Support Western Demands: Bloc Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet

    B.C. Government Grappling With Multiple Labour Disputes By Public-Sector Unions

    The British Columbia government faces a "difficult balancing act" in dealing with labour strife among public-sector unions representing bus drivers in Metro Vancouver

    B.C. Government Grappling With Multiple Labour Disputes By Public-Sector Unions