Vancouver police chief defends handcuffing of Indigenous man and granddaughter
Police officers followed standard procedure when they handcuffed an Indigenous man and his 12-year-old granddaughter after they tried to open an account at a Vancouver bank, according to the city's chief of police.
'The bank was adamant that a fraud had been committed,' says Adam Palmer
Police officers followed standard procedure when they handcuffed an Indigenous man and his 12-year-old granddaughter after they tried to open an account at a Vancouver bank, according to the city's chief of police.
Chief Adam Palmer defended the officers' actions, saying they were responding to a report of a fraud in progress from a reputable source.
"The bank was adamant that a fraud had been committed and they were providing information that led our officers to believe that," he told CBC News.
"The world that we live in as police officers, we are responding to things in real time, and we have to take the facts as we have them."