Author ORCID Identifier

François Tanguay-Renaud: 0009-0001-0257-5153

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

8-31-2025

Keywords

Racial Profiling, Policing, Canadian Charter Of Rights And Freedoms, Police Powers, Arrest, Detention, R. V. Le, R. V. Dudhi, R. V. Ali, Luamba, R.V. Sitladeen, R. V. Brown, R. V. Richards, Discrimination, Abuse of Process, Charter Remedies, Rule of Law, Liberty, Equality, Roving Random Traffic Stops, Whren

Abstract

Since the turn of the millennium, Canadian appellate courts have been investing increasingly systematic efforts in demystifying and curtailing racial profiling in policing. These judicial efforts have so far been focused on the application of the legal criteria for arrest and detention as well as their regulation under section 9 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. In this article, I contend that this unidimensional approach is unsound and outline a corrective path forward. First, I argue that the prevailing judicial understanding of what racial profiling is and how it affects the lawfulness of arrests and detentions has the paradoxical effect of undercutting the rule of law, the advancement of which is the very purpose of section 9. It chiefly does so by requiring an overbroad range of arrests and detentions to be declared unlawful. Second, I contend that the current approach also fails to address racial profiling for the core wrong that it constitutes—namely, wrongful discrimination on the ground of race, which section 15 of the Charter expressly prohibits. I make the case that addressing the phenomenon under this complementary paradigm would make it possible for courts to censure and remedy arrests and detentions tainted by it even when, for rule-of-law-related reasons, they should not be declared unlawful. Thus, it would offer courts the ability to thread a more careful and complementary remedial needle. Finally, I raise the possibility of a third paradigm—that of judicial stays of proceedings for abuses of process—to help address cases that the other two paradigms are ill-suited to redress. Overall, I maintain that courts have at their disposal all the doctrinal tools they need to address racial profiling in policing with appropriate discernment. For the rule of law’s sake, they should make use of all of them instead of unjustifiably putting all their eggs in one procrustean basket.

Comments

"Forthcoming in the Osgoode Hall Law Journal. Pre-publication version – 31 August 2025"

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