Post-summit protests on June 28 A total of 1118 people were arrested in relation to the G20 summit protests, while nearly 800 of them were released without charge. The remaining 231 people remained with charges before the court while 58 of them have had their charges withdrawn or stayed. Smaller-scale, non-violent protests took place the following day, June 28, during the afternoon and evening. Nearly 1000 protesters marched to
Toronto City Hall and
Queen's Park to protest the treatment of arrested individuals at the
Eastern Avenue holding centre and demanded the release of individuals still being detained, although police had earlier released several arrested on minor charges. Large numbers of Toronto Police Service officers continued to patrol the demonstrations. On June 29, a group of gay activists gathered outside a community centre where Toronto Police Service chief
Bill Blair was scheduled to speak to demand his resignation for the treatment of women and homophobia within the detention centre.
Criticism of policing On December 7, 2010, Andre Marin, Ontario Ombudsman, issued a report called
Caught in the Act, an investigation into the legality of the
Ontario Public Works Protection Act, and, more specifically
Regulation 233/10, in Marin's words, "...known as the secret security regulation, a little known and widely misunderstood legal measure that was supposed to help the police keep the peace, but in my view wound up contributing to massive violations of civil rights." A group of lawyers requested court injunctions against the
Toronto Police Service from using newly purchased
Long Range Acoustic Devices (LRAD), also known as sound cannons, during protests. Sound cannons have been used in previous summit protests and have the ability to produce sound at ear-piercing volumes, potentially causing
hearing impairment. The
Ontario Superior Court of Justice later ruled that officers can use sound cannons, with a few restrictions. The
Toronto Star reported that the
Executive Council of Ontario had implemented a regulation under the provincial Public Works Protection Act on June 2 granting the ISU sweeping powers of arrest within a specific boundary during the summit; the rule was said to designate the security fence as a
public works and, as such, allow any police officer or guard to arrest any individual failing or refusing to provide identification within five metres of the security zone. The regulation was requested by
Toronto Police Service chief
Bill Blair and debate in the legislature was not required.
Orders in Council such as this one are announced in the
Ontario Gazette, but the next issue of that publication was to be published after the order expired on June 28, a week after the summit ended. The new law came to light after a
York University graduate student, who claimed to have been simply "exploring" the security zone but who did not provide identification when confronted by police, was arrested on June 24 under the regulation. He later vowed to file a lawsuit against the law once the summit ended. The
Cabinet later confirmed that the new laws were not "special powers" and that those who were believed to have been arrested under the Public Works and Protection Act were in fact arrested under the
Criminal Code. The police chief later admitted that, despite media coverage, no such five-metre rule ever existed in the law.
Human rights investigations Individuals arrested during the protests who claimed to be
bystanders not taking part in protests condemned the treatment they received from police at the
Eastern Avenue holding centre. According to testimonials given to the
Toronto Star and
La Presse by a few arrestees, including university students, journalists,
street medics, teachers, tourists, photographers, and a former mayoral candidate, "[individual] rights were violated" and "police brutality [was present]." The detention centre was described as "cold" with "barely any food or water" and "no place in the cages to even sit", and "tantamount to torture". Other allegations included harassment, lack of medical care, verbal abuse, and strip searches of females by male officers. At one point, a plainclothes officer reportedly told a detainee that
the federal government had declared
martial law. Blair defended the conditions in the temporary detention centre, citing the fact that every room in the centre was under
video surveillance, and that to the best of the officers' abilities, occupants were read their rights. However, a
Toronto Star commentator editorialized that "some of the elements of
classic authoritarian detention were there, albeit in embryonic forms." The
Canadian Civil Liberties Association decried the arrests and alleged that they occurred without "reasonable grounds to believe that everyone they detained had committed a crime". Toronto Police Service held press conferences to speak out against inappropriate actions of protesters, including displaying items alleged to have been seized from protesters. However, when confronted,
Chief Blair admitted that some of the items were unrelated to the G20 protests. Police officers were also reported to attack detained
journalists, while forcing other journalists to leave the scene of the protests.
Adam Nobody Protester Adam Nobody, 27, was arrested in Queen's Park on 26 June. An amateur video uploaded to
YouTube showed at least a dozen officers surrounding and beating Nobody, who was not armed and did not appear to resist. He suffered a broken nose and cheekbone, and was charged with assaulting police. These charges were eventually dropped, and a
Special Investigations Unit investigation was opened into the incident. This investigation was closed without any charges laid, because the SIU was unable to identify the officers. They had covered their identification badges, police witnesses all claimed to be unable to identify them, and the arresting officer had written an invalid ID number on Nobody's arrest record. Police chief Bill Blair insisted that a "forensic examination" had proven the video was "tampered with", removing proof that Nobody was an armed, violent criminal, but soon retracted this statement admitting he had no evidence to support it. Blair's claims led to increased attention to the case, new witnesses coming forward, and a second video corroborating the first. On 30 November the SIU re-opened its investigation, obtained the co-operation of a police officer who witnessed the incident, and laid charges against Const. Babak Andalib-Goortani. The SIU has the names of other officers involved but has not yet laid charges against them. Blair, PM Stephen Harper and the Toronto Police were harshly criticized over the incident, with many commentators calling for Blair to resign. ==Investigation and charges against police==