Strutz Strutz:
Did they even give him the opportunity to retrieve his insurance registration papers to show them it was his car?
$1:
In a tweet following the incident, Montreal police said the officers believed the car was stolen because they saw damage near the locks typical of stolen cars.
Police said the officers were in the process of verifying if the car was stolen when they saw Dossa approaching the vehicle, and so they detained him temporarily while they finished their verifications.
CBC was able to independently verify after the incident that Dossa's car was new and there was no visible damage around the locks.
They weren't going to let him verify the car was his, because they straight up lied about their reasons to believe the car was stolen to begin with. Too many cops make up a scenario, and then find evidence to verify their own biases while ignoring other evidence that contradicts it.