Laval lawyer filing racial profiling complaint after Montreal police handcuff him in front of daughter - Action News
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Montreal

Laval lawyer filing racial profiling complaint after Montreal police handcuff him in front of daughter

Laval lawyer Kwadwo Yeboah is filing a police complaint after he says he was pulled over and then handcuffed when police thought his licence was fake. It was real. He was still handed a $400 ticket.

Kwadwo Yeboah says police searched his phone and wallet without a warrant, before handing him a $400 ticket

Laval lawyer Kwadwo Yeboah is filing a complaint with the provincial police watchdog because he says he was racially profiled when he was handcuffed after a traffic stop Thursday evening. (Simon Nakonechny/CBC)

The first thing that came to Kwadwo Yeboah's mind when he saw his teenagedaughter climb out of his carin tears was to ask her to document what was happening to him.

It was last Thursday evening, he was in the process of being handcuffed by Montreal police.

"I told her, 'Film! Film! Film!" Yeboah said on a sidewalk near Chinatown where he was pulled over last week.

On Monday, the 38-year-old defence lawyer reenacted the way a Montreal police officer grabbed and twisted his arm moments after pulling him over, as several other officers stood by.

Yeboah saidhe was initially told he was being arrested because the officer believedhis driver's licence was fake.

But after policeappeared to search through his phone and walletwhile he was in the back of their cruiser, he said they told him they were releasing him with a ticket for holding a cellphone while driving.

Laval lawyer decrying traffic stop that landed him in handcuffs

4 years ago
Duration 0:56
Laval lawyer Kwadwo Yeboah is filing a police complaint after he says he was pulled over and handcuffed after police thought his license was fake, though it turned out to be real. He was still handed a $400 ticket.

Yeboahbelieves he was unfairly targeted because he is Black, and that there was no reason officers should have put him in handcuffs for thinking he had a bogus licence, not when they could have simply seized the document and his vehicle.

Consequently, Yeboah said, he is filing a complaint to the Commissaire la dontologie policire, as well as to Quebec's human rights commission. He said hehopes speaking out will help prevent it from happening to others.

"I'm a firm believer that we should all be treated fair, but if I looked like a Jean Tremblay, I don't think I would have been in handcuffs, given a ticket, just for having held a cellphone," Yeboah said.

The Laval residentand his daughter,Kenya Yeboah-Whyne, were pulled over on their way to picking upsome food in Chinatown at around 6 p.m. Thursday.

Yeboah said a Montreal police car drove up alongside and signalled him to pull over. After Yeboah gave the officer his licence and while he was looking for his insurance papers, another police cruiser arrived and double-parked next to him.

He saidwhen he got out of the car to show the first officer the insurance documents, the officertold him he was under arrest and produced the handcuffs.

woman and man
Kwadwo Yeboah and his daughter, Kenya Yeboah-Whyne, were on their way to pick up take-out Thursday night when he was pulled over by police. (Simon Nakonechny/CBC)

Yeboah believes the officer thought his licence was fake because it is an older version of the current document, though itis valid until2023. But he maintained the officer acted too fast in moving to arrest him.

"If a cop can't tell the difference between a real and fake licence, something must have gone wrong in their training," Yeboah said.

Meanwhile, his daughter stepped out of the car to try to make sense of what was happening. That's when he told her to film because, he said,he didn't know what could happen next.

The videoshows a chaotic scene with two police cars and her father being hustledinto the back of one. There is no sound because she was on a phone call while filming.

"I was like, 'Oh my god, why are they all here for this small, little thing?' It was just crazy," Kenya said.

As Yeboahwas detained in the back of the cruiser, he saidhe noticed police looking through his phone. It was then he told them he was a lawyer, and the information on his phone was covered by solicitor-client privilege:

"They started to laugh, and I asked them what's so funny?" he said.

After searching his wallet and finding hisQuebec Bar Association membership card, Yeboah saidtheir behaviour changed.

"I think at that point they realized, there's something, we probably made a mistake or I don't know what they realized," he said.

In the endthey released him and sent him on his way with a $400 ticket for holding a cellphone while driving. The ticketbears no mention of any invalid or fake licence.

A spokesperson for the Montreal police said the servicecan'tcomment on every videoof police interventions circulating on social mediaYeboah posted the snippetfilmed by his daughter to his Facebook page and addedcitizenshave a right to lodge a formal complaint if they feelwronged during such an intervention.

With files from Simon Nakonechny