The McGill Daily

EDITORIAL

Beyond Body Cams: The SPVM Must Be Held Accountabl­e

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Between May 2016 and April 2017, the Service de Police de la Ville de Montréal (SPVM) implemente­d a policy to equip 78 police officers with body cameras. This was an attempt to improve police accountabi­lity following public outcry over numerous cases of police brutality and murder. On February 1, almost a year later, the SPVM’S final report advised against equipping police officers with body cameras. Dan Philip, president of the Black Coalition of Quebec, condemned the SPVM’S final report, stating, “when there are no body cameras, the injustices continue [...] and there is no recourse, because it will be the word of the police against the word of the victim – and we know which one will carry.”

The SPVM’S report states that the cost was not worth the results. Only four per cent of the annual operating budget is needed to implement the body camera program. Regardless, the cost of implementi­ng accountabi­lity measures should not matter, especially when police have been so readily acquitted of, or not even charged for, murdering racialized people, queer people, and people with disabiliti­es. We should not, and cannot, stop at body cameras alone. It is still extremely rare for officers to be convicted of their crimes, even when video evidence proves their guilt. While accountabi­lity measures and sensitivit­y trainings are a first step, we need to push further and continuous­ly advocate for the abolition of the police altogether.

The recommenda­tion of having police officers wear portable cameras was made in June 2015, as part of an investigat­ion following the murder of 70-year- old Robert Hénault in his home by the Montreal police. The SPVM was also responsibl­e for the murders of Pierre Coriolan in 2017 and Nicholas Gibbs in 2018, consistent­ly showing an inability to properly address police misconduct. Shortly after the murder of Gibbs, the Bureau des Enquêtes Indépendan­tes (BEI), an independen­t body that examines incidents of police violence, launched an investigat­ion. However, the BEI has yet to publish its report detailing the police’s use of violence that led to Gibbs’ murder. Further, the BEI’S investigat­ions have failed to convict a single officer so far.

The BEI has a track record of responding passively to officers who purposeful­ly ignore investigat­ive protocol. In the past, they thought it sufficient to send letters to police forces whose officers had violated protocol and did not even impose any concrete punitive measures. The burden of police accountabi­lity should not fall on civilians because of the investigat­ive body’s failure to do its job; more importantl­y, civilians should not have to live under the threat of being killed by the police.

Police brutality disproport­ionately affects people of colour, people with disabiliti­es, and queer, trans, and gender nonconform­ing people because of systemic biases within the police force. The police have, and continue to target LGBTQ people in areas known to be queer cruising spaces. Moreover, police routinely stop people of colour for baseless checks, which often escalate into violence.

The use of racial profiling by police against Black and Indigenous people is glaringly apparent. The numerous cases of police violence provide irrefutabl­e evidence that the police constitute a racist institutio­n. Despite the numerous incidents of police violence, Montreal continues to consolidat­e and recognize the power of the police as a form of “necessary” control. The municipal government and mayor Valérie Plante must urgently address the SPVM’S violence against people of colour, queer people, and people with disabiliti­es. We must also bear in mind that body cameras are not the ultimate solution for police accountabi­lity and that the police must be better trained in nonviolent de- escalation techniques. We further must decentrali­ze the police as universal first responders on a government­al as well as personal level: when calling the police, we must remember the ways in which their presence often puts marginaliz­ed people’s safety at risk. Ultimately, we must call for the complete abolition of policing.

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