Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver police told to change handcuff policy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2021 03:56 PM
  • Vancouver police told to change handcuff policy

VANCOUVER - The Vancouver Police Board will hear a report Thursday recommending the force change its handcuffing policy after the arrest of an Indigenous man and his 12-year-old granddaughter at a bank in 2019.

The police board says it launched a review of the department's protocols when Maxwell Johnson and his granddaughter were handcuffed after trying to open an account at the Bank of Montreal using their government-issued status cards.

The board report says it was later determined there was no criminal activity involved and it began revising its handcuff policy after the arrest and subsequent media attention.

The new policy recommends that handcuffs be used when reasonable, proportionate to the risk and necessary to fulfil a legitimate policing objective when the officer believes using cuffs is necessary.

Johnson filed a complaint with the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal last year alleging the bank called 911 over an identification issue because they are Indigenous, while it accuses the police of racial profiling leading to their detention and the use of handcuffs.

The police department issued a statement after the rights case was launched saying the circumstances were "regrettable" and understandably traumatic for Johnson and his family.

 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

743 COVID19 cases for Friday

743 COVID19 cases for Friday
88.6% (4,107,666) of eligible people 12+ in BC have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine.  89.1% (3,853,731) received their second dose. 7,937,214 doses of vaccine have been administered.

743 COVID19 cases for Friday

B.C. teachers urged to get vaccinated

B.C. teachers urged to get vaccinated
Union president Teri Mooring said Friday that it's up to the provincial government to take leadership at a time when cases among schoolchildren are climbing instead of relying on 60 school districts to come up with their own vaccine mandates.

B.C. teachers urged to get vaccinated

TransLink employees told to get COVID-19 vaccine

TransLink employees told to get COVID-19 vaccine
TransLink, Metro Vancouver's transportation network, and the Insurance Corporation of B.C. have announced their workers must be fully vaccinated by November. 

TransLink employees told to get COVID-19 vaccine

B.C. posts leading jobs numbers, low jobless rate

B.C. posts leading jobs numbers, low jobless rate
Economic Recovery Minister Ravi Kahlon says the numbers indicate B.C.'s recovery during the COVID-19 pandemic is gaining strength provincewide, with the Prince George, Okanagan and Cariboo areas posting the strongest gains.

B.C. posts leading jobs numbers, low jobless rate

Catalytic converter theft leads to assault on Vancouver woman

Catalytic converter theft leads to assault on Vancouver woman
On October 4, just before 7:30 a.m., the victim confronted two men who were actively removing the catalytic converter from her vehicle, which was parked near Renfrew Street and East 1st Avenue. The suspects deployed bear spray when the victim approached them. The suspects are still outstanding.

Catalytic converter theft leads to assault on Vancouver woman

StatCan says economy added 157,000 jobs in Sept.

StatCan says economy added 157,000 jobs in Sept.
Statistics Canada says the unemployment rate would have been 8.9 per cent in September, down from 9.1 per cent in August, had it included in calculations Canadians who wanted to work but didn't search for a job.    

StatCan says economy added 157,000 jobs in Sept.