Quebec watchdog submits report into police shooting of 15-year-old Nooran Rezayi
MONTREAL — Just over five months after police shot dead a 15-year-old boy on Montreal’s South Shore under circumstances that are still unclear, Quebec’s independent police watchdog submitted its report on the shooting to the province’s prosecution service.
Nooran Rezayi was killed by Longueuil police after they responded to a 911 call about a group of allegedly armed youth in a residential neighbourhood. The oversight agency — Bureau des enquêtes indépendantes, or BEI — has said the only gun seized at the scene belonged to the officer who shot the teen. Police did seize a baseball bat, a backpack and ski masks, but no sharp-edged weapons.
The BEI’s report on the Sept. 21 shooting hasn’t been made public, but it comes after serious allegations that South Shore police allegedly acted inappropriately following the incident.
Documents from the BEI released last year say police waited too long — 1 hour and 36 minutes — to inform the oversight agency about the shooting death, and during that time officers interviewed witnesses and tried to collect video footage. Longueuil police should not have been investigating the killing of a civilian by one of their own officers, the watchdog said.


