ttc video

New footage released of violent altercation between TTC officers and passenger

An independent investigation into a disturbing incident on Toronto's 501 streetcar has concluded with the finding that three TTC officers used "unnecessary force" against a passenger who refused to provide proof of payment earlier this year.

The altercation in question first made headlines on Feb. 7, 2020, when a fellow passenger captured part of the scuffle on camera and shared it via Twitter.

Just 12 seconds long, that video clip prompted immediate outcry among members of the public and advocates who've long been criticizing the TTC's heavy-handed fare enforcement techniques — which, in this case, involved at least one officer punching the customer while another doused him in pepper spray.

This is not the first time that TTC guards have come under fire for what Toronto Ombudsman Susan Opler describes as "unacceptable violent interactions" with "marginalized members of our community, including people who are racialized, are experiencing homelessness, have lower incomes and/or may be living with mental health challenges or other disabilities."

Knowing this, Opler reached out to TTC management immediately after learning of the 501 streetcar pepper spray incident to ask for action.

The transit agency subsequently retained Rubin Thomlinson LLP to conduct an investigation into what had happened — the results of which were recently publicized in a report that will go before the TTC Board this week.

The 43-page-long report is damning and, at times, disturbing: Two special constables were found to have used "unnecessary force" against the passenger while one fare inspector is said to have used "unauthorized and unnecessary force."

"The special constables made the initial physical contact by each grabbing one of the passenger's arms. I further found that the special constables then escalated the struggle when special constable 1 immediately pulled the passenger forward, and special constable 2 wrapped his arm around the passenger," reads the report.

After a "very fast-moving struggle, during which they flailed their arms, pushed, and punched each other," one special constable is said to have pushed the man into a seat. The second then "deployed OC [oleoresin capsicum] spray."

The investigation also found that "while her assistance was not requested, fare inspector 1 applied a pressure point in which she pressed two of her fingers against the base of the passenger's neck for approximately 35 seconds."

While TTC special constables have the legal authority to use force when a situation demands it, fare inspectors do not.

The report also concluded that the special constables "discriminated against" the passenger by applying unecessary force, based on their perceptions that he had a mental health condition.

Opler said in a Dec. 14 letter to members of the board that she was disappointed in what the report found, and she doesn't seem pleased with the TTC's proposed response either.

"On Dec. 4, 2020, I met with members of TTC management at their request, to discuss their proposed response to the investigation. I have had several discussions with senior members of the TTC leadership in the days since," she wrote in her letter to the board.

"My impression from those discussions was that they want to do the right thing by the public, and they appeared to welcome and appreciate my advice. However, I am concerned that TTC management would have done nothing without my intervention, or if this incident had not come to the public’s attention through social media."

Opler's immediate advice to the TTC was three-fold: Publicly release the entire Investigation Report (or a complete and impartial summary); publicly release the TTC's own video footage of the incident; and take steps to overturn the passenger in question's criminal conviction on two counts of Assaulting a Peace Officer.

"Fairness demands this, given that the convictions were premised on the TTC staff's version of the facts (namely that passenger 1 started the fight), which the independent investigation found to be untrue," wrote the ombudsman of the third recommendation.

TTC management have already complied with at least two of the recommendations: The Rubin Thomlinson report is available online, and the transit commission uploaded CCTV footage from the incident to its YouTube page on Monday.

The first video, entitled "501 Queen Streetcar – Feb. 7, 2020 (Angle 1)"
runs just under two minutes long and shows at least one special constable punching the passenger in question multiple times.

It is of note that the Rubin Thomlinson report found that the passenger himself was "being assaultive, applying at least one strong punch to special constable 1, and appearing to punch special constable 2 several times."

"Based on the relevant evidence, I accepted that the perceived strength of the passenger's punches warranted the special constables applying some measure of force in order to subdue him," it reads. "Put another way, the punches from the special constables were reasonable, proportionate, and necessary in light of the passenger's own punches towards them."

The second video is much longer, running more than eight-and-a-half minutes, and depicts more of what happened leading up to the physical altercation.

We also see the passenger exchanging punches with the special constables before they handcuff him and then bend him over a seat for two minutes and 40 seconds.

This, too, was found by investigators to be unecessary "given that he had been handcuffed, no longer posed a threat, and posed a low risk of becoming assaultive, escaping, and/or accessing a weapon."

"I also note that the nature of this position did not appear to be particularly comfortable or dignified, given that he was bent at the waist at an approximately 90-degree angle, and over a seat."

"The Rubin Thomlinson Investigation Executive Summary has provided TTC staff with additional perspective on actions needed to change the culture and practices of Revenue Protection and Special Constable Services," wrote TTC management in its response letter, which is also set to go before the board on Tuesday.

"It is important to note the recommendations can be addressed through the work plans that are already underway. TTC staff are in the process of reviewing the uniforms, training, customer service practices, mandates, job roles and supporting organizational structures for the Revenue Protection and Special Constables Service departments."

"The TTC is committed to continuing its journey towards building a respectful and inclusive workplace culture by providing continuous education on anti-racism, human rights, accessibility, diversity and inclusion," the agency's management response document continues.

"While strategic programs are being put in place to attract, recruit and retain a diverse workforce that reflects the City that we operate in, we must also look inwardly at our workforce."

Lead photo by

Toronto Transit Commission


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Disturbing video shows Toronto car theft suspect slam into cop and send him flying

Toronto's new park with fake beach and lookout tower to open this summer

People are losing it over driver that lodged their truck under a bridge in downtown Toronto

Several species of lobster-like creatures spreading and causing havoc across Ontario

Ontario is the least satisfied with life out of every Canadian province and it's getting worse

All the ways Canadians will get more money from the government this summer

Toronto news headlines from 1881 are just as weird as today's

Long-closed Toronto park with hidden waterfall won't fully reopen until at least 2026