Racial Profiling in Policing
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Kenora OPP will test 12 in-cruiser cameras
First time devices used in Canada
By JANET GIBSON, Sun Media
KENORA — Like a black box in an airplane, its indestructible. A digital video camera mounted inside a police cruiser was displayed by the Kenora OPP yesterday, part of a three-year pilot project that kicks off March
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The OPP will test 12 in-cruiser video cameras in Kenora and 22 in Toronto — the first time such cameras have been used by a police force in Canada.
The cameras will help the OPP maintain the highest standards of professionalism, enhance safety for the police and the public and combat racial profiling, said North West region OPP commander Supt. Mike Armstrong.
The project was first announced in December 2003, one day after the Ontario Human Rights Commission released a report recommending cameras be installed in police cruisers to combat racial profiling.
At the time, OPP Chief Supt. John Carson said the cameras will prove the police dont engage in profiling. While the Kenora OPP has made a plan to train its officers in the use of the cameras, it hasnt decided when the cameras will be turned on, how long it will retain the video and when it can release the video.
The “digital eyewitness” cameras, purchased