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Editorial: Don鈥檛 hide the names

As the Vancouver Police Department has said: 鈥淲e never want to live in a society where someone can be murdered in secret.鈥 Sadly, too many other agencies of government and law enforcement don鈥檛 seem to agree.

As the Vancouver Police Department has said: 鈥淲e never want to live in a society where someone can be murdered in secret.鈥

Sadly, too many other agencies of government and law enforcement don鈥檛 seem to agree.

As the sa国际传媒鈥檚 Katie DeRosa and Lindsay Kines reported on the weekend, there is a disturbing trend to withhold the names of victims of violent deaths.

We don鈥檛 know the name of the man shot and killed by police at the Departure Bay ferry terminal last week. Victoria police have not released the name of a man killed on Hillside Avenue in March, although family and friends identified him as Joe Gauthier.

The RCMP, the Coroners Service and the Independent Investigations Office, which investigates fatal interactions with police, say the Privacy Act prevents them from releasing names. They and others say there must be a public-interest reason for giving out names.

But defining the public interest is highly subjective, and they are interpreting the act too narrowly.

Our tradition of an open justice system harks back to fears of England鈥檚 Star Chamber, where people were tried and punished in secret. For our justice system to be effective and trusted, it must operate in the full light of day. Releasing names has long been 鈥 and should still be 鈥 part of that transparency.

While the police and other agencies generally have good intentions, withholding names makes it harder for the public to hold them accountable. And it makes it harder for the rest of us to see victims and perpetrators as people.