Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pacific Centre Suspicious Incident: Vancouver Police Say Actions Of 3 Men Were Completely Innocent

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2016 12:35 PM
    VANCOUVER — A leaked internal police memo and accompanying photo labelled three "Middle Eastern" men suspicious, but on Friday Vancouver police said the men they wanted for questioning were actually innocent.
     
    The leak gives an inside look at police communication and reveals how common such suspicious circumstances can be.
     
    Still photos from surveillance footage began circulating Thursday night after Internet news and culture publication Vancity Buzz posted an article saying police were looking to speak with the men, who were spotted taking pictures of the entrances and exits at a local mall.
     
    Police Chief Adam Palmer told a news conference Friday that the information about the suspicious incident was included in a confidential police bulletin, and was never intended to be released to the media. 
     
    "We weren't planning on going public with it at this point because we didn't feel it was something serious enough to go public with at this point," he said.
     
    Hours later, police released a statement saying they had identified and spoken with the men.
     
    "All three men were co-operative with investigators and they had a very logical explanation regarding their behaviour," the statement said. "The investigation has conclusively determined that their actions were completely innocent."
     
     
    Vancity Buzz editor in chief Farhan Mohamed said his team published the story because it was in the public interest.
     
    "I don't think it's fear-mongering. I think we're just being factual that this is happening and this could be something," he said.
     
    The publication received a tip, and confirmed the information with police, who did not ask them to stifle the story, Mohamed said.
     
    "I understand the gravity of the situation and investigations," he said. "And had it been a situation where they said 'This is an ongoing investigation, nothing that we want out yet, can you please not run it' then we wouldn't have run it."
     
    The bulletin stated that the men were Middle Eastern, a fact Vancity Buzz included in their story.
     
    Palmer said the description was not racial profiling, and that details on race are always included in these kind of memos between police forces.
     
    "Regardless of what race these people may or may not be, that's not really the issue. The issue is that we weren't planning to go public with it at all," he said.
     
    Reports of suspicious incidents are a regular occurrence for police, and the process includes looking to police experts before taking the information to the public, Palmer explained.
     
    Often, that process includes sharing information with other police forces.
     
    "When we fan these types of things out to police officers throughout the province, on almost every occasion, somebody will know who this person is," the chief said.
     
     
    Despite the leak, Palmer said his force will not change the way it shares information with other forces.
     
    They won't search for the source of the leak either.
     
    "To track that down would be pretty onerous and pretty unlikely to find out who actually did it," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary Man Says Giant Wave Knocked Over Tofino Whale-Watching Boat That Claimed Six Lives

    Dwayne Mazereeuw knew lives were in peril after a giant wave hit the Leviathan 11 and tossed him, his wife and 25 others into the chilling, rolling waters off the west coast of Vancouver Island.

    Calgary Man Says Giant Wave Knocked Over Tofino Whale-Watching Boat That Claimed Six Lives

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault
    Fifty-three-year-old Michael Dodd has been charged with sexual assault and sexual interference of a person under the age of 16.

    RCMP Asks Dawson Creek Residents About Actions Of Man Charged With Sex Assault

    City Of Burnaby Loses Trans Mountain Court Battle, Ordered To Pay Company's Costs

    City Of Burnaby Loses Trans Mountain Court Battle, Ordered To Pay Company's Costs
    The Metro Vancouver city has tried to hamper preliminary planning in advance of laying the 1,100-kilometre-long pipeline between Alberta and coastal B.C. through two separate bylaws.

    City Of Burnaby Loses Trans Mountain Court Battle, Ordered To Pay Company's Costs

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty
    Sid Frankel, one of the report's authors, says more children in Manitoba are slipping into poverty despite a provincial strategy introduced in 2009.

    Most In Canada: Report Says One In Three Manitoba Children Living In Poverty

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report
    The report by the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS says opioids such as oxycodone are increasingly being overprescribed for patients who become dependent on the medication.

    Overdose Deaths Could Be Reduced If More B.C. Doctors Used Database: Report

    Ontrio Police Denounce Trophy Hunting After Headless Deer Carcasses Found

    Ontrio Police Denounce Trophy Hunting After Headless Deer Carcasses Found
    Police say a resident found the carcasses — which were missing their heads and fur — around noon Monday in North Dumfries, near Cambridge.

    Ontrio Police Denounce Trophy Hunting After Headless Deer Carcasses Found