Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Surrey Creep Catcher Ordered To Remove Photos, Details From Website

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Jul, 2017 11:32 AM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's information and privacy commissioner has ordered a Surrey-based vigilante group to stop posting personal information about two men the group alleges are linked to child luring.
     
     
    Acting information and privacy commissioner Drew McArthur says in his ruling that Surrey Creep Catcher violated B.C.'s Personal Information Protection Act by gathering and posting information about the men.
     
     
    McArthur investigated complaints from two people and says the group used deceptive or misleading practices when it communicated with them and made video recordings of their meetings.
     
     
    The decision says the recordings were posted to social media along with added allegations that the men had attempted to lure and meet with a minor for sexual purposes.
     
     
     
     
    Surrey Creep Catcher defended itself saying that it wasn't violating laws because it was acting for  journalistic purposes, a claim McArthur rejected in his decision.
     
     
    McArthur says the group made no effort to provide an accurate and fair description of the facts, and he has given the group 30 days to remove videos and personal details of the men from its social media sites.
     
     
    "In short, the organization's true purpose in collecting, using and disclosing personal information is to "name and shame" those whom it considers to be creeps, rather than offer a journalistic perspective on the issue," he says in his written decision released Tuesday.
     
     
    McArthur has also ordered the group to destroy all of its records, video and communications with the complainants.
     
     
     
    Surrey Creep Catcher president Ryan Laforge was not immediately available for an interview, but he told Vancouver radio station CKNW that he will not comply with the ruling.
     
     
    "No, the whole purpose of what we do is to protect children from these guys," he says. (The Canadian Press, CKNW)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three Accused In Murder Of B.C. Gangster Want Case Tossed Over Delays

    Three Accused In Murder Of B.C. Gangster Want Case Tossed Over Delays
    Surrey's Jujhar Singh Khun-Khun, 25, has been charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder in relation to the 2011 shooting death of gangster Jonathan Bacon in Kelowna. Khun-Khun is being charged alongside two other men.

    Three Accused In Murder Of B.C. Gangster Want Case Tossed Over Delays

    Women-only Overdose Prevention Site Opens On Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    VANCOUVER — A safe injection site that will only serve women has opened on Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

    Women-only Overdose Prevention Site Opens On Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    Drier Conditions Ease Flood Threat In B.C., But Warm Weather Could Complicate

    Drier Conditions Ease Flood Threat In B.C., But Warm Weather Could Complicate
      Regional District officials say recent drier weather stabilized slopes in the Shuswap region near Tappen, and in the Killiney Beach subdivision on the west side of Okanagan Lake.

    Drier Conditions Ease Flood Threat In B.C., But Warm Weather Could Complicate

    Soggy Spring Won't Delay Watering Restrictions Across Metro Vancouver

    Soggy Spring Won't Delay Watering Restrictions Across Metro Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — Lawn watering restrictions are now in effect across Metro Vancouver despite a soggy spring.

    Soggy Spring Won't Delay Watering Restrictions Across Metro Vancouver

    Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins

    Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins
    VANCOUVER — There will be no new whales, dolphins or porpoises kept at the Vancouver Aquarium in the future if the city's park board approves changes to its cetaceans bylaw on Monday.

    Vancouver Aquarium Opposes Park Board Proposal Banning Captive Whales, Dolphins

    Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV

    Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV
    It starts at $14.95 per month for a package of 30 channels, which includes Canadian networks CBC, CTV, Global and City and the big U.S. networks ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC

    Bell Appeals To Cord-cutters With Live TV Streaming Service Alt TV