Latest News Roundup - All posts tagged 'police'
Wednesday, March 2, 2011

McGuinty ignores calls for inquiry into G20 abuses

A scathing Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA) report on police conduct during the G20 has sparked new calls for a joint federal-provincial public inquiry to determine who was responsible for "serious violations of fundamental rights and freedoms." The report was released days after the broadcast of a Fifth Estate documentary that featured shocking videotaped evidence of abuse by uniformed officers. 

Premier McGuinty, busy tweeting about canoe trips, has rejected calls for an inquiry. According to the Toronto Star, McGuinty is staying mum on the arrests that took place at Queen's Park, where he had personally invited people to protest during the G20 in a so-called free-speech zone (add victims of G20 abuse to an angry list that includes queer youth in publicly funded Catholic schools and students demanding queer-positive sex education curriculum).

March 1 editorials in the National Post and the Toronto Star both called for an inquiry. 

A CBC post on the CCLA report has received a whopping 1,453 comments. The most popular, with 1,130 "agrees," reads:

A dark day in Canadian civil liberties and free speech, 1,100 Canadians arrested and few charged. A comprehensive public inquiry is the only way to go. 

Days after the brutal events of the G20 weekend, the Toronto Police Service’s lesbian, gay, bi and trans liaison officer, Thomas Decker, was quoted in Xtra dismissing calls for answers: “The Pride weekend has shown that an overwhelming majority of the community appreciate and support [the] police.”

Decker's comments followed a protest at the 519 Church Street Community Centre against Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair's Pride reception, which was held at the community centre days after the G20.

The executive director of The 519, Maura Lawless, has since expressed regret for allowing police to host their event at the centre:

“In retrospect, the event should never have gone ahead and that’s clear. We were trying to find a balance.”

You can watch the Fifth Estate documentary on the CBC site here or via the embedded video below.

 

 

Bookmark and Share

Thursday, July 15, 2010

20th anniversary of Montreal's Sex Garage raid

In July 1990, relations between Montreal police and the queer community hit a low point after a brutal clampdown on the after-hours Sex Garage party. The events "politicized an entire generation of queer activists," wrote Richard Burnett in a recent column for Xtra.  

(Sex Garage © Linda Dawn Hammond / IndyFoto.com '90)
 
An excerpt from Burnett's column:
400 partygoers — mostly gay men, lesbians and drag queens — filed outside like they were told. Some drag queens climbed out the windows and crawled across century-old rooftops to avoid the cops. They were used to it, too. After all, Montreal police had been raiding and harassing gay spaces for decades, only this time no one was going home: Outside stood 16 police cruisers and 40 officers wielding billy clubs.

What no one knew, though, was that history would be made on this morning, at 4am, Jul 16, 1990, and it all began when the cops took off their name tags.

"We were scared when the police got into battalion formation because we knew then that we were going to be beaten," said Montreal photographer Linda Dawn Hammond, now based in Toronto.
...
Nine badly bruised partygoers were arrested and charged with everything from mischief to assaulting a police officer. Hammond's negatives survived, and her photos made it onto the pages of The Gazette and La Presse the next day. But it took the shocking images of police brutality during peaceful protests over the next two days, however, to finally and irrevocably shake three million Montrealers out of their complacency.
>> read Burnett's full piece on the raid, protests and the fallout, featuring photos by Linda Dawn Hammond

SexGarage1990 on YouTube has uploaded archival news footage of the post-raid protests.  

 


Bookmark and Share


Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Video: Toronto police chief Bill Blair heckled at Pride party

Most reporters were asked to leave Tuesday night's Toronto police Pride reception at The 519, but we caught the protest on camera. Watch below:


Read more about the event, and what went on inside, in the written account that we posted last night

CP24 caught a quick comment from Blair as he left the event. The reporter asked Blair why the protesters were angry, to which Blair replied "Frankly, I don't know and I'm not sure I care."

(Toronto police chief Bill Blair is heckled by queer protesters as he enters The 519 on June 29. Photo by Matt Mills)

Meanwhile, another rally is planned for Canada Day:
 
Queen's Park (in front of the legislature)

 

Read more:

 


Bookmark and Share


Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Weapons? They were supposed to be decorative.

Police Chief Bill Blair used a cache of household items seized over the weekend to justify the force with which they disrupted protests. Prominent among the “potential weapons” were bamboo poles, the CBC reports.

But poles confiscated by police were never intended as weapons, their owners say. Had they not been confiscated, they would have been used to fly Pride flags at a picnic in Cawthra Park.

Michael Went and Doug Kerr say they were on their way to Oasis, a low-key gay picnic intended to celebrate the anniversary of Stonewall.

The couple say they took the poles from planters in their condo, where they were being used decoratively.

On the morning of Sunday, June 27, they were preparing to bike from their place at College and Spadina to Cawthra Park, in Toronto’s Church-Wellesley neighbourhood.

Went says that a man warned the pair that police were confiscating anything that could be used as a weapon.



“Within a minute, two police officers arrived,” and asked to take the poles, says Went. Neither he nor Kerr resisted the seizure.

Went says he finds it “shocking” that the seizure would be used to justify police conduct, since “I never, ever thought of them as weapons.”

Even so, they’re taking things in stride.

“How am I supposed to get my bamboo poles back?” Kerr asks.

(Photo: people at a civil liberties march in Toronto on June 28. About 2,000 showed up to protest police overreach.)

Bookmark and Share  

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Skinner family ups reward to more than $100K

The family of Chris Skinner announced Tuesday that the reward for information leading to the conviction of his killer has been upped to $100,000. 

 

Skinner, a gay man, was walking home from his sister's birthday party in Toronto's entertainment disctrict on Oct 18 when, at the corner of Victoria and Adelaide, he was beaten to the ground by at least three men who then fatally drove over him with an SUV. 

Check out Xtra's coverage of the Skinner case here

There were several witnesses to the attack, CCTV video of the SUV and Skinner in the moments before the attack and at least three men in the suspect SUV, but so far police have not had a break in the case. On Dec 8 the Toronto Police Service (TPS) announced a $50,000 reward for information leading the conviction of Skinner's killer. The balance of the $100,000 is from the Skinner family and donations to a reward fund. Read about how you can contribute to the award fund here.

Anyone with information about Skinner's murder is asked to contact Toronto Police Service Detective Stacy Gallant at 416−808−7410, or Crime Stoppers at 416−222−8477. And Xtra here.   
 


Bookmark and Share


Powered by BlogEngine.NET 1.4.0.0

The Roundup

Xtra.ca's Roundup
blog is your source
for news and
analysis that has
queer people
talking.

The Roundup is
written by Xtra's
staff reporters:

Andrea Houston
andrea.houston@xtra.ca

Natasha Barsotti
natasha.barsotti@xtra.ca

 


Log in
Feed Subscribe