Toronto Police have arrested the 14 year old boy accused in the unprovoked stabbing death of a woman out shopping last Thursday. Authorities obtained special permission to feature the under-age teen's name and picture while they were hunting for him, something they can no longer do now that he's in custody and has been charged.
I get that we want to protect the I.D. of a minor (although there is something to be said for allowing people to know who he is) but this causes all kinds of problems for people who run newsroom websites, as I once did. You had to go back in the archives, find every reference to the kid and his name, change the copy, and delete and replace his picture with something else.
I remember it being a real pain, because you were never quite sure you could find them all. But under the law, they had to be taken out, or you could be in legal trouble. Chances are no one was going to access a week old story, but it might happen, and we had to thoroughly scrub any evidence that might I.D. the suspected culprit.
I'm assuming with the arrest on Sunday that newsrooms across the city are having to go through this annoying rigamarole. It's part of the law, but I always dreaded those situations, simply because you had to account for and find every mention in every article, sometimes from months or even years ago, depending on the circumstances.
I'm glad they got their man - er, boy - but what a pain that is.