Monday, June 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Taxi Driver Fired After Alleged Anti-Semitic Attack On Montreal Man

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Aug, 2019 07:51 PM
  • Taxi Driver Fired After Alleged Anti-Semitic Attack On Montreal Man

MONTREAL - A Montreal tax driver has lost his job after allegedly punching and choking a Jewish man in a parking lot.

 

The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs is calling the attack alleged to have occurred Sunday a hate crime.

 

A security camera video circulating on social media shows a man quickly exiting a taxi and putting his arm around the neck of another man who approached his vehicle.

 

The two men seem to struggle together before they move behind another car and are obscured from the camera's view.

 

CIJA spokesman David Ouellette said the alleged victim was visibly Jewish because he was wearing a kippa, a religious skullcap worn by Jewish men.

 

Ouellette said the man had asked the driver to move his taxi in order to make room for another vehicle.

 

According to a police report obtained by The Canadian Press, the alleged victim had taken a photo of the taxi's licence plate and a vehicle number in order to identify him. He claims the driver began hurling anti-Semitic insults before getting out of the vehicle and punching him several times and choking him.

 

Ouellette said the man did not suffer serious injuries.

 

George Boussios, president of Taxi Champlain, said he saw the video for the first time Thursday and "immediately" fired his driver.

 

"It's totally unacceptable," Boussios said in an interview. "We don't tolerate assaults, anti-Semitism or racism," noting his company has thrived thanks to Jewish passengers from the neighbourhood of Outremont. "They are our customer base," he said.

 

A Montreal police spokesman refused to confirm the incident, but CIJA said police told the organization they were investigating the alleged attack as a hate crime.

 

The Jewish advocacy group said it was also told by Taxi Champlain that the city's taxi bureau will revoke the driver's permit.

MORE National ARTICLES

Five injured in alleged random assaults in Vancouver

Police say they received several reports of a man randomly punching people near Waterfront Station on May 28.

Five injured in alleged random assaults in Vancouver

Stringent measures to help improve Metro Vancouver's air quality by 2035

Stringent measures to help improve Metro Vancouver's air quality by 2035
Greenhouse gases are estimated to fall by 35 per cent and smog-forming pollutants by 70 per cent by 2035 because of more stringent standards for fuel and vehicle emissions.

Stringent measures to help improve Metro Vancouver's air quality by 2035

Rapid response to B.C.'s overdose crisis saved thousands, report finds

Rapid response to B.C.'s overdose crisis saved thousands, report finds
Researchers looked at a 20-month period from April 2016 to December 2017 when 2,177 people died of an overdose, concluding that the number of deaths in B.C. would have been two and a half times higher.

Rapid response to B.C.'s overdose crisis saved thousands, report finds

Trudeau worried China could target imports of other Canadian products

Trudeau says he will see if it's appropriate to have a conversation directly with China's President Xi Jinping about a number of bilateral difficulties later this month at the G20 summit in Japan.

Trudeau worried China could target imports of other Canadian products

Ottawa pledges to spend $15 million to restore Ontario's tree-planting program

Premier Doug Ford's Progressive Conservative government cancelled the 50 million trees program amid various other budget cuts.

Ottawa pledges to spend $15 million to restore Ontario's tree-planting program

Man who killed Calgary Stampeder must serve 18 years before applying for parole

Nelson Lugela was found guilty earlier this year of second-degree murder in the death of Mylan Hicks.

Man who killed Calgary Stampeder must serve 18 years before applying for parole