Quebec's high court rejects random police stops ahead of Supreme Court hearing

A view of the Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine courtroom during a guided tour of the Quebec Court of Appeal in Montreal, Saturday, March 29, 2025. Quebec's Court of Appeal has refused the province's request to allow arbitrary police traffic stops to continue until a legal challenge of the practice is heard by the Supreme Court of Canada. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

MONTREAL - Quebec's Public Security Department announced late Friday afternoon that most random traffic stops by police are suspended, days after the Court of Appeal affirmed that arbitrary road checks lead to racial profiling. 

The new policy has been in place since April 1, the department said, the day Quebec's Court of Appeal refused the government's request to allow arbitrary police traffic stops to continue until the province's legal challenge is heard before the Supreme Court.

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