Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Montreal Latest Canadian City To Test Body Cameras For Police Officers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 May, 2016 12:00 PM
    Montreal has become the latest Canadian city to equip its police officers with body cameras.
     
    Mayor Denis Coderre says about 30 officers — in subway and traffic patrol units — will wear cameras during phase one of the nine-month pilot project, which started on Wednesday.
     
    Officers working out of two or three neighbourhood police stations will be equipped with the cameras beginning in the fall for phase two.
     
    The cameras are made by Axon Public Safety Canada, a subsidiary of Taser International Inc., that offers body cameras and video management products to police forces across Canada.
     
    All the video recorded by the cameras will be hosted on a cloud-based server run by Taser and located physically in Canada.
     
    Montreal says it will host public consultations after the pilot project ends to hear what citizens think of the cameras.
     
    Proponents say the cameras provide better evidence, lead to more convictions, improve officers' interactions with the public and reduce police use-of-force incidents.
     
    Critics say the videos invade the privacy of citizens, and worry that administrative duties related to body cameras will keep officers away from policing.
     
    Montreal follows cities such as Toronto and Edmonton, which have tested the technology.
     
    Toronto's project ended in April while Edmonton's study ended in 2014.
     
    Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson had told The Canadian Press there wasn't a good business case for the program and it wasn't worth the hassle.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mentally Ill Adults Need More Services In And Out Of Hospital: B.C. Audit

    Mentally Ill Adults Need More Services In And Out Of Hospital: B.C. Audit
    Carol Bellringer says there's a lack of information about wait lists and whether programs meet the needs of the most vulnerable patients.

    Mentally Ill Adults Need More Services In And Out Of Hospital: B.C. Audit

    Siphon Creek Blaze Grows In Northeastern B.C., As Crews Hope For Weather Break

    Siphon Creek Blaze Grows In Northeastern B.C., As Crews Hope For Weather Break
      Environment Canada was calling for strong gusts Monday and Wildfire information officer Kevin Skrepnek agrees conditions were challenging to start the week, but he also says crews are thankful for more moderate winds.

    Siphon Creek Blaze Grows In Northeastern B.C., As Crews Hope For Weather Break

    B.C. Daughter Donates Kidney To Mom, Starts Marathon Transplant Awareness Ride

    B.C. Daughter Donates Kidney To Mom, Starts Marathon Transplant Awareness Ride
    Twenty-eight-year-old Eileen Zheng says both she and her mother are living healthy lives after the transplant operation last year.

    B.C. Daughter Donates Kidney To Mom, Starts Marathon Transplant Awareness Ride

    Vancouver Teen Engineers Bacteria To Win Top Prize At Biggest School Contest

    Vancouver Teen Engineers Bacteria To Win Top Prize At Biggest School Contest
    Austin Wang, 18, won a US$75,000 award for engineering genetically modified E. coli bacteria that speeds up the process of converting organic waste into electricity.

    Vancouver Teen Engineers Bacteria To Win Top Prize At Biggest School Contest

    Vancouver Man Accused Of Shooting Bull Moose Out Of Season Gets New Trial

    Vancouver Man Accused Of Shooting Bull Moose Out Of Season Gets New Trial
    Xin Xiao, 49, was found guilty last year of hunting out of season, possession of an animal and abandoning an animal.

    Vancouver Man Accused Of Shooting Bull Moose Out Of Season Gets New Trial

    Former B.C. Official Faces Breach Of Trust Charge

    Former B.C. Official Faces Breach Of Trust Charge
    A special prosecutor approved the charge against Brian Bonney in connection with the duties of his office.

    Former B.C. Official Faces Breach Of Trust Charge