a haitian woman pulled over so often her daughter learned the “survival instinct” of showing officers their groceries when they approached, proving they were out shopping and hadn’t done anything wrong.
a young black man stopped so frequently — sometimes twice a day — that police started addressing him by his first name, compelling him to move away.
or a business owner who decided to remove his company’s logo from his car, fearing people seeing it pulled over so often would ruin the company’s reputation.
“the power (to conduct random traffic stops) is an open door to racial profiling,” marie-eve sylvestre told the city’s public security committee, “allowing police officers to impose unconscious prejudices, biases and stereotypes.”
sylvestre, dean of the civil law section at the university of ottawa’s faculty of law, was invited to city hall to present the findings of a 2023 study she co-authored on the link between random traffic stops and racial profiling in quebec.
a first of its kind in the province, the study spoke with 25 people from montreal and its surrounding suburbs that have been pulled over by police for no specific reason.