Montreal to hold off on more Tasers for police following racial bias report - Action News
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Montreal

Montreal to hold off on more Tasers for police following racial bias report

Days after the release of an unflattering report revealing the extent of racial bias in theMontreal police service, the city has put on hold a plan to equip all patrollers with stun guns.

SPVM asked for stun guns, citing 2014 coroner report into death of Alain Magloire

The city will re-evaluate its plan to equip police patrollers with stun guns in 2020. (Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette/Canadian Press)

Days after the release of an unflattering report revealing the extent of racial bias in the Montreal police service, the city has put on hold a plan to equip all patrollers with stun guns.

The independent report, commissionedby the City of Montreal,found that Indigenousand black people were four to five times more likely than white people to be stopped by police.

The report included recommendations for police tocreate a street check policy, develop additional procedures to monitor racial profiling and continue to train police officers on preventingsystemic discrimination.

On Thursday, the city said it would hold off on aplan to equip more officers with Tasers andmake those recommendations a priority instead.

Police initially asked for more Tasersin April 2018, citing arecommendationfrom QuebeccoronerLuc Malouin, who wrote a report following the February 2014 death of Alain Magloire.

Magloire, who was homeless and mentally ill, was fatally shot by police while officers waited for the arrival of an officer equipped with astun gun.

Currently, there is at least one stun gun at each local police station and one in every patrol carin downtown Montreal and in the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough.

Dan Philip, president of theBlack Coalition of Quebec told CBC that he fears equipping more officers with stun gunscould result in people of colour facing more danger when they're stopped by police.

Dan Philip, president of the Black Coalition of Quebec, told CBC Tasers can be deadly, depending on the circumstance. (CBC)

He referred to stun guns as "just another unnecessary tool in order to suppress people." He said that Tasers can be deadly, depending on the circumstance.

He pointedto the 2007 death of Montrealer Quillem Registre,who was Tasered six times by police and died four days later.

Rosannie Filato, the executive committee member responsible for public security, saidthe city will re-evaluate whether to buy more Tasers in 2020.

"It's not the priority right now," saidFilato. "Notably, the recommendations that were made on Monday by the three researchers related to racial profiling. For us, it will be important to focus on training of police when it comes to profiling and de-escalation."

With files from Verity Stevenson