Montreal

Montreal police ramp up use of body cameras

The second phase of a pilot project begins next Thursday, with 40 officers from the Plateau-Mont-Royal, Lachine and Saint-Michel boroughs wearing the devices.

Officers in Plateau-Mont-Royal, Lachine and Saint-Michel to wear devices under phase 2 of pilot project

A person poses wearing a police body camera.
By mid-October, 40 more Montreal police officers will be equipped with body cameras such as this one. (Submitted by Montreal police)

About 40 police officers working out of three stations in Montreal will be wearing body cameras in the coming weeks.

The second phase of the pilot project begins next Thursday, with officers from Station 38 in the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough being equipped with the new technology.

On Oct. 5, officers at Station 8 in Lachine will get them and the force is aiming for officers at Station 39 in Montreal North to be wearing them by Oct. 14.

The three stations were chosen because they receive a high volume of calls and because officers at those stations intervene in a variety of situations and deal with diverse segments of the population, police say.

In the first phase, which began in May, 20 Metro police officers and 10 traffic patrollers working in the southern part of the island were equipped with cameras.

The pilot project will last until February, when all the cameras will be taken out of service. Public consultations will begin in the spring.

Montreal police chief Philippe Pichet shows off a vest that will outfitted with a body camera. A badge indicates the device is being used. (Sarah Leavitt/CBC)

Montreal police chief Philippe Pichet announced the plan last October. The police union and Mayor Denis Coderre have both voiced their support for the project in the past.

Montreal police say the goal of having officers wear the cameras is to ensure the transparency of police interventions and build trust between citizens and police.

There is some evidence that use of body-worn cameras by police reduces both complaints against police and the use of force by front-line officers.

The initiative was the first of its kind in Quebec when it was launched. It will cost $1.7 million for 2016, which includes salaries for those assigned to the project and buying the cameras.