
In April 2010, Montreal high school teacher Farid Charles and his friend Jermaine Fraser went to pick up food. They parked parallel to the restaurant—a Caribbean place in the southern Montreal borough of Lasalle. Jermaine went in to get their order while Farid stayed in the passenger’s seat. Suddenly the driver’s door opened and a head popped in. Service de Police de la Ville de Montreal officer Christopher Brault asked for his license and registration. Charles explained that the car belonged to a friend and that he didn’t have that information. Brault then asked Farid for his ID. Confused, Farid asked under what grounds, and said that he didn’t know what was happening.
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Farid Charles: I was scared. I didn’t know what’s going to happen. [When they took me into the police car I thought,] ‘Are they going to take me away and beat the shit out of me?’ I didn’t know.What were you feeling when Officer Brault told you to think twice about refusing to give your ID?
I realized then and there that this wasn’t a police officer representing the law, this was personal. I felt like a second-tier citizen. They dehumanized me, they made me feel like an animal.Looking back, do you still feel that way?
I keep telling people, they took something away from me that night. They took my freedom. We don’t live in a society of martial law nor a society of slavery where I need my papers to go from one plantation to another.
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No. They didn’t ask him for his papers, they didn’t speak to him.What happened once they let you out of the car?
They gave me a $144 ticket for “wandering without a cause.” It made no sense; I was sitting in a car waiting for food.Afterwards I left the officers, went into the restaurant bathroom and cried. I felt like shit, my clothes were dirty and my jacket, that I had saved up for, was ripped all the way down the back. I still don’t understand it and what ‘wandering’ means. Can I not go for a jog, what are the restrictions on ‘wandering’?I’ve been asked if I could go back, would I change anything that I did? I didn’t do anything wrong. I can’t change that I was hungry and went to get food. I was on public property, sitting in the passengers seat, waiting for food. What they did was illegal, they cited gang activity and breaking and entering but their bylaws don’t apply to private property and I wasn’t doing anything wrong.

Has anything like this happened to you before?
I’ve been given tickets for nonsense, things that I have to waste my time and money contesting; things that I have won in court, but this was my tipping point. Our tax dollars go to these guys, and for what? Defending wrongdoing. We’re paying for the abuse we’re enduring. Even now, I’m bothered by the sound of cops.
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I didn’t sleep that night; I went to work the next morning. When I saw all the kids I teach and they told me about all of the problems they have with the police, that’s when it started to kick in that I can’t allow this to happen. I spoke to a lot of people about it and no one could believe it. I decided it was time to lead by example. Although I’m a very private person and I knew that this would expose my personal life, I knew it was for the right reasons. There’s a lot worse happening to other people and if no one speaks up, it’ll keep happening.Explain what’s going on with the appeal.
It’s been four years. I have two or three court dates a year. I can’t even remember all of the processes. The media has been saying I was awarded $33,000, but it was a recommendation. The Human Rights Commission gave a recommendation, saying I was racially profiled. They recommended $25,000 from the city, $5,000 from Officer Brault and $3,000 from Officer Boucher-Bacon for damages. They had until June 13 to pay but they didn’t. So now we have to go to another court and do this all over.That’s a pain in the ass.
It’s not about the money—it’s about the principle. If you go out on the street corner or to the barber shops and you bring up the situation with cops, and ten black people are there, I guarantee you at least six out of ten people have had a negative experience where they’ve been racially profiled. I’ve seen it, since this has happened to me, people come up to me all the time to tell me their stories.
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I believe some individuals with some malicious intent do, or their thought process might be off, and they ruin it for the rest of cops. There’s a flaw in the system that allows the bad police to ruin it for all the police that could be good. This is why we lose faith in the system. The same system that we’re paying to defend us is the same system that’s brutalizing us and hurting us, emotionally and physically. Making us feel like second tier citizens, and we’re not.Why do you think that the Ethics Committee ruled that there was no racial profiling?
There was five charges, they weren’t found guilty of racial profiling but found guilty of everything else. It doesn’t make logical sense. Everything was done wrong, let’s look at the sequence of events. But if you tell the public it’s racial profiling, you’re telling them that your police officers are racially profiling people. You don’t want to open up that can of worms. It’s dangerous for them, it says that there’s a problem and they need to do something.What are you hoping to accomplish?
People need to be held accountable. I see cuts in nursing, schools and so forth, and it’s taxpayers’ dollars that are going towards this. Why are we taking money that can be used in better places and giving it to the wrongdoings of police? We need change. We need to have a proactive approach to policing. Let’s take these police and give them the proper training, schooling, let’s build that up between communities instead of defending their wrongdoings.
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It’s hard to identify with something you’ve never been through. I’m black, you’re white. As much as you give us the same education, the same everything, once we come out of the school system it’s not going to be the same opportunities. People are not going to view you the same way they view me and it’s something that’s evident and something we’ve got to live with.Racial profiling exists, whether it’s jokes or serious, it does exist. If I walk somewhere, I can feel people looking at me in stores. If someone says something’s missing, they’re not looking at you first; they’re looking at me. I experienced that as early as elementary school, I was one of eight black kids, they weren’t looking at the white kids; they were looking at me.@jesskenwood