Blind black man says he was victim of 'barbaric' arrest in Nelson Mandela Park - Action News
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Montreal

Blind black man says he was victim of 'barbaric' arrest in Nelson Mandela Park

Vacqueth Stevenson, a 54-year-old blind man, was hanging out in a Cte-des-Neiges Park last month when he says an encounter with police officers turned aggressive - to the point of injury.

Montreal police say arrest wasn't racially motivated, force justified after officer hit in head

Vacqueth Stevenson, 54, say he suffered pain in his fingers and wrist and a contusion after he was violently arrested by police officers last month. (CBC)

What started out as a casualevening in aCte-des-NeigesPark ended in allegations of police brutality, assaulting an officerand calls for an inquiry into the systemic harassment of black people in Nelson MandelaPark

Vacqueth Stevenson, a 54-year-old black and blindman, was listening to music on his small speakers the night of May 23 with friends when he was approached by two police officers.

Stevenson said they asked him to turn down the music. He says he complied.

He was about to leave the park when a male officer asked him for ID. Next thing he knew, he says they were violently arresting him.

"The officer put my hands behind me," Stevenson said.
The commander of Montreal Police Station 26, Mohamed Bouhdid, said the use of force was justified during the arrest of Vacqueth Stevenson because the 54-year-old hit one of the officers in the head. (SPVM/Youtube)

"He was pressing on my finger, and I said 'Stop breaking my finger, stop breaking my finger,' and he keep breaking it."

Stevenson said he heard people scream, "He's blind! He's blind!" but despite their pleas, he was taken to a nearby police station.

Now, Stevenson says, he feels horrible pain in his fingers and wrist and suffered a contusion to his skull.

"To me, it's not civilized, and it's a kind of barbaric style. It is very bad what they did to me, and I hope they won't do it to anyone else," he said.

Stevenson received a $149 ticket for making noise withsound equipment and was charged with assaulting a police officer.

Stevenson hit officer in the head, police say

Cmdr. MohamedBouhdid, the head of Station 26,the neighbourhood police station where Stevenson was charged, said the use of forcewas justifiedbecause the 54-year-old hit one of the officers in the head.

"So, of course, they had to arrest him and control him," Bouhdid said.

That led to Stevenson's criminal charge.

We do have many calls for noise problems in that specific part of the park, and it's not a racial matter at all it's a noise matter.- Cmdr. MohamedBouhdid, head of Police Station 26

Bouhdid said police officers initially approached Stevenson and his friends because they received a noise complaint. Later they realized that Stevenson and others were also drinking alcohol.

He said the officers didn't know Stevenson was blind because they saw him walking away with a bike.

Noise matter or race matter?

For Fo Niemi, theexecutive director of the Center for Research-Action on Race Relations, the fact that Stevenson is black stands out.

"It's so ironic," Niemi said. "The park is named after Nelson Mandela, and here you have a black man in his 50s who is blind and is being treated with such excessive force and ends up with a criminal charge."

Niemi wants the new bureau for independent investigations into police interventions (BEI) to look into the case.

Fo Niemi, right, says the way police officers treated Vacqueth Stevenson warrants an investigation from Quebec's new independent investigation unit and a wider inquiry into what he calls the systematic police harassment of black people in Nelson Mandela Park. (CBC)

He's also pushing for a wider inquiry on whether there is systematic police harassment of black people in the park.

Bouhdid said Stevenson was free to file a complaint with the police if he felt he was treated unfairly, but he insists the arrest wasn't raciallymotivated.

"We do have many calls for noise problems in that specific part of the park, and it's not a racial matter at all it's a noise matter.

Stevenson is set to appear in court July 26.

With files from Salimah Shivji