Quebec rights commission upholds black family’s complaint against police
MONTREAL — Quebec’s human rights commission is recommending a suburb south of Montreal pay four members of a black family $86,000 and implement anti-discrimination training for its police officers following an alleged incident of racial profiling.
The family members had filed complaints against the city of Longueuil and two of its police officers, alleging they were mistreated during a police intervention in Nov. 2013.
The commission’s written decision alleges hat one of the two officers used “excessive and unjustified force” in stopping the then-17 and 19-year-old complainants as they walked away from a bus station in Brossard, on Montreal’s South Shore.
“They grabbed them, threw them against the police car, handcuffed and searched them, before even informing them of the reason for intercepting them,” reads a summary of facts presented in the commission’s decision.