Hearings begin at Supreme Court on constitutionality of random police traffic stops
MONTREAL — The Supreme Court of Canada started hearing a case on Monday about whether it’s constitutional for police to make random traffic stops, after Quebec’s highest court ruled that the practice leads to racial profiling.
The case involves Joseph-Christopher Luamba, a young Montrealer of Haitian descent who said he was repeatedly stopped by police for no apparent reason, beginning shortly after he got his licence in 2019. None of the stops resulted in a ticket.
Luamba and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association went to court to challenge the power of police to stop drivers without a reasonable suspicion that an offence had been committed.
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. Quebec’s Court of Appeal upheld the ruling in 2024.











