The Toronto police are far from perfect but I'm sorry the tone of this thread verges on ridiculous. While I believe it is undeniable that the police wield, even abuse, their power to infuence political decision-making and protect their own the question is who doesn't? And furthermore, on a relative scale Toronto police are in my opinion the most docile and least corrupt I have been exposed to. Forget international examples that expose a vast difference, just use comparisons like the police force of Vancouver or Montreal or the RCMP. Have you ever dealt with or seen the police force of Vancouver in action?
You know, I sure didn't feel that way when the Toronto police forcibly and illegally searched me the Monday after the G20 because I was wearing a black t-shirt walking home through the downtown. I refused consent for the search, they told me they didn't give a shit whether I consented or not, proceeded to restrain me, removed my bag from me and searched it without probable cause.
My complaint to the TPS is unanswered to this day.
Cursory searches on YouTube -- and indeed the evidence collected by the Canadian Civil Liberties Association -- reveal that constitutional violations were rampant, in particular illegal, random, suspicion-less searches.
After that experience, my opinion of the Toronto Police is that they're nothing more than a bunch of jackboot fascists. For those who would say it's a few bad apples, I'd ask where the good apples are to whistleblow on the bad apples. There were about fifty riot police in the vicinity of where I illegally searched. Not one of them intervened. The supervisor I complained to gave me a blank stare, turned and walked away.
Fuck the Toronto Police. Fuck them all.
The funny thing is, I grew up in a very conservative family and was what you consider one of those law and order types. The sort of person who would have supported mandatory minimum sentences, etc.
The interesting thing is, instead of getting more conservative as I've gotten older, I've gotten more anti-statist. And this experience was certainly one that further opened my eyes to the evil of state power and the slow atrophy of our civil rights.
When I see the so called "good majority" of police step forward and testify against these well documented and obvious civil rights violations, I'll attenuate my views. But that has not happened. In fact, if not for the Toronto Star's persistent reporting on the matter, it doesn't even seem likely that the few criminal charges that were laid ever would have been taken seriously by the SIU.
So I say only one thing to people: video tape the police. Always. Get pulled over by the police? Record them with your cellphone. See someone pulled over while walking by, stop and record them. That's what I do.