Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police To Wear Body Cameras For Disbanding Of Homeless Camp

The Canadian Press , 14 Oct, 2014 02:31 PM
    VANCOUVER - Vancouver's police force says some of its officers will be wearing video cameras during the  dismantling of a homeless camp that is facing a court-ordered eviction.
     
    A B.C. Supreme Court judge has issued an injunction ordering people living in about 200 makeshift shelters in the city's Oppenheimer Park to clear out by 10 p.m. on Wednesday.
     
    Police Chief Jim Chu says officers will be on hand to keep the peace, particularly if city staff begin clearing away the encampment, and some of those officers will be wearing video cameras.
     
    Chu says the city has purchased eight cameras that can attach to officers' chests, though he declined to say whether all eight of those cameras will be deployed at Oppenheimer Park.
     
    The force already uses handheld cameras at large events and protests, and Chu says the wearable cameras are simply an extension of that practice.
     
    Chu says they're still examining whether to deploy wearable cameras throughout the force, though he says the newly purchased cameras will be used in the future.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper joins search for lost ships of Franklin expedition

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper joins search for lost ships of Franklin expedition
    The final resting place of the lost ships of the Franklin expedition may remain a mystery for at least another summer.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper joins search for lost ships of Franklin expedition

    Nunavut prison still squalid, drug-ridden a year after watchdog's report

    Nunavut prison still squalid, drug-ridden a year after watchdog's report
    You won't see it on the itinerary for Stephen Harper's annual northern tour, and it's somewhere the prime minister would probably rather not be seen, anyway.

    Nunavut prison still squalid, drug-ridden a year after watchdog's report

    Tough work, real risk: Aid groups seeking health-care workers for Ebola response

    Tough work, real risk: Aid groups seeking health-care workers for Ebola response
    The conditions are gruelling, there may be a pay cut and the personal risks are all too real.

    Tough work, real risk: Aid groups seeking health-care workers for Ebola response

    Tim Hortons, Burger King shares surge, traders anticipate tax friendly merger

    Tim Hortons, Burger King shares surge, traders anticipate tax friendly merger
    A deal between Tim Hortons and Burger King could finally help the coffee and doughnut chain successfully expand into the U.S. market but it shouldn't mean customers will see any changes when they visit either fast-food chain.

    Tim Hortons, Burger King shares surge, traders anticipate tax friendly merger

    Ontario man declared dead in 1986 found alive in U.S., police say

    Ontario man declared dead in 1986 found alive in U.S., police say
    LONDON, Ont. - A man missing for almost 40 years and declared dead by the courts has been confirmed alive by Ontario Provincial Police....

    Ontario man declared dead in 1986 found alive in U.S., police say

    B.C. teachers return to picket lines, ramp up pressure on government

    B.C. teachers return to picket lines, ramp up pressure on government
    Teachers across British Columbia were expected to be on picket lines beginning Monday in an attempt to increase pressure on the provincial government, but their union was saying little about its plans a week before school was scheduled to start.

    B.C. teachers return to picket lines, ramp up pressure on government