British Columbia

'Hands Off!': Vancouver police take aim at gropers with new campaign

Vancouver police have partnered with Metro Vancouver, Transit Police and Barwatch in a public awareness campaign about unwanted sexual touching.

'Hands Off!' posters in trains, buses and bars carry message that any unwanted touching is sex assault

Sgt. Steve Addison speaks for the Vancouver police during the launch of the Hands Off! Campaign targeting sexual offenders Nov. 26, 2019. (CBC)

Vancouver police have partnered with Metro Vancouver Transit Police and Barwatch in a public awareness campaign about unwanted sexual touching.

The Hands Off! campaign is a city-wide effort to remind would-be offenders that groping is a crime that could result in an arrest and sexual assault charges, according to a police statement emailed Tuesday.

The campaign group plans to put up posters in Vancouver bars which are members of the crime watch group called BarWatch, inside Translink SkyTrain and Canada Line cars, and on bus shelters throughout the city.

"It appears that some people don't understand that groping is a crime," said Vancouver police Sgt. Steve Addison. "We are concerned about the number of groping incidents we are seeing in the city."

Vancouver police Sgt. Steve Addison, Barwatch's Kendra Belsheim, and Transit Police Sgt. Clint Hampton launch anti-groping campaign Hands Off! in Vancouver Nov. 26, 2019.

'Numbers are high'

Since the beginning of 2018, The Vancouver Police Department says it has investigated 174 reports of unwanted sexual contact from strangers in public places. Another 75 investigations have been initiated by Transit Police on buses and SkyTrains in the city during that time.

"[Groping incidents] continue to be a serious issue on the transit system," said Transit Police Sgt. Clint Hampton. "Offenders need to realize these are all sexual assaults, and anyone who commits an act of groping is a sexual offender."

Barwatch's Kendra Belsheim said the campaign is about creating a safe environment for staff and customers.

"Everyone who comes to a restaurant or bar deserves to feel safe, and nobody should have to worry about being grabbed by a stranger," said Belsheim.

The Vancouver police urges anyone who thinks they have been a victim of unwanted sexual touching to call 911 immediately