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Delta, B.C. police investigate alleged voyeurism in FedEx staff washroom

Delta police said Monday they had arrested an employee of the business on July 7, who was subsequently released on conditions "pending further investigation."

Delta, B.C. police investigate alleged voyeurism in FedEx staff washroom
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Delta police said Monday they had arrested an employee of the business on July 7, who was subsequently released on conditions "pending further investigation."

Delta police investigate alleged voyeurism in FedEx staff washroom Police say FedEx employee arrested and released on conditions pending further investigation Police in Delta, B.C., are investigating allegations of voyeurism amid reports of a recording device installed in a staff washroom at a FedEx in the Tilbury area. The Delta Police Department said Monday an employee of the business was arrested on July 7, and was subsequently released on conditions "pending further investigation." Staff Sgt.

Mike Whitely told CBC News police began investigating based on a report from an employee. "Investigators believe the incident was isolated to this workplace, and there is no information to suggest a broader risk to the public," Whitely said. The allegations have sparked furor at the Delta facility, where employees and supporters gathered Monday evening to protest.

Women's advocacy group the Kaur Movement said six women have since come forward to report seeing videos of themselves using the washrooms on pornographic websites. Group founder Gurpreet Kaur alleged that a camera was hidden on garbage cans inside individual women's toilet stalls, and said the company informed workers last week that recordings had been posted online. In an emailed statement, FedEx said its first concern is the women affected by the crime.

"Upon learning of the situation, we acted immediately, including co-operating with law enforcement, terminating the employment of the individual responsible, strengthening security and providing counseling and support resources for our team members," the company said. But Kaur said the company received and failed to act on several verbal complaints that the suspect had been entering the women's washroom at the 300-worker facility. “FedEx needs to do better, they knew about these reports, several reports have been made by several different employees in the past two years," she said.

"Why weren’t any of those reports taken seriously? This was all preventable.” CBC News asked FedEx about the timeline of the complaints, but has yet to receive a reply.

Kaur said since workers were told about the allegations, dozens of employees have not been showing up to work. Whitely confirmed FedEx has been co-operating with police. “With the advancement of technology and it becoming smaller and more accessible we’d just like to tell the public, especially in places where privacy is expected, if you see anything unusual or out of place please contact the police," he added.

With files from Troy Charles, Lauren Vanderdeen and Simon Little

Published
Jul 13, 2026
Updated
Jul 13, 2026
Source
Cbc
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Top
City
Delta
Read time
2 min
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SourceCbc
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PublishedJul 13, 2026
UpdatedJul 13, 2026

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PublishedJul 13, 2026, 6:30 PMThis story was published by BC Post.
ImportedJul 13, 2026, 8:00 PMThe item entered the BC Post source pipeline.
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Cbc Published Jul 13, 2026 Imported Jul 13, 2026
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Cbc Jul 13, 2026
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