City of Montreal in court trying to overturn landmark police racial profiling ruling
MONTRÉAL —
Lawyers for the City of Montreal asked the Court of Appeal on Tuesday to overturn a landmark class-action ruling on racial profiling by police, saying it’s too complicated to determine who is eligible for compensation.
The city is appealing a 2024 Superior Court ruling that determined Montreal police had a systemic racial profiling problem. Racialized citizens had alleged they were unfairly stopped, arrested, detained, and profiled by police between mid-August 2017 and January 2019.
Superior Court Justice Dominique Poulin held the city responsible for violating class-action members’ Charter rights, ordering it pay each of them up to $5,000 in damages. However, her ruling reduced the period during which people profiled by police can claim compensation to six months, between July 11, 2018, and Jan. 11, 2019.


