Data shows spike in church arsons after unmarked grave reports in Canada
Data shows spike in church arsons after unmarked grave reports in Canada
The tightening of Canada’s asylum laws was an inevitability: Michael Barutciski in the Globe and Mail

Supreme Court to hear appeal of Quebec ruling that invalidated random police stops – Montreal [Video]

Categories
Quebec News

The Supreme Court of Canada has agreed to hear a case about whether it’s constitutional for police to make a random traffic stop without reasonable suspicion the driver has committed an offence.

Canada’s highest court announced Thursday it has granted the Quebec government leave to appeal a lower court decision that said random stops lead to racial profiling.

The case involves Joseph-Christopher Luamba, a Montrealer of Haitian descent who said he had been stopped by police nearly a dozen times without reason, including several times when he was behind the wheel. None of the stops resulted in a ticket.

Quebec Superior Court Justice Michel Yergeau sided with Luamba in October 2022, saying that racial profiling exists and that it’s a reality that weighs heavily on Black people.

Real estate is the
Real estate is the 'perfect avenue to launder money.'
Unravelling MAiD in Canada: Rethinking policy and practice