Peter Yuen

Chinese-Canadian former Deputy Chief of Toronto Police From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Yuen is a Canadian politician and retired police officer, serving for 35 years. He was Deputy Chief of the Toronto Police Service from 2017 to 2022 and headed the Toronto police community safety command.[2]

Succeeded byKim Yeandle (Acting)
Born1965 (age 6061)
PartyLiberal (federal)
Ontario Liberal (provincial)
Quick facts MOM, Deputy Chief of the Toronto Police Service (Community Safety Command) ...
Peter Yuen
源植勉
Yuen in 2025
Deputy Chief of the Toronto Police Service (Community Safety Command)
In office
2017–2022
Succeeded byKim Yeandle (Acting)
Personal details
Born1965 (age 6061)
PartyLiberal (federal)
Ontario Liberal (provincial)
Alma materUniversity of Guelph (BA, MA)
Police Career
DepartmentToronto Police Service
Service years1987–2022
Rank Deputy Chief of Police
AwardsOrder of Merit of the Police Forces[1]
Police Exemplary Service Medal
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Biography

He was born in Hong Kong and immigrated to East York in 1975, 11 years after his birth,[3] where his father opened a restaurant.[4] Yuen attended Scarborough’s Blessed Cardinal Newman Catholic Secondary School. He initially pursued a degree in chemical engineering at McMaster University in Hamilton before leaving after two years to become a police officer.[3] While investigating a gambling den as an undercover Constable, Yuen was severely beaten and mock executed after he was exposed as a police officer.[5][6]

Yuen became the first Superintendent within the Toronto Police Services of Chinese heritage[3] and was named police officer of the year.[5] In April 2018, he provided an update to the public on behalf of Toronto Police Services and Constable Kenny Lam following the 2018 Toronto van attack.[7]

Political career

In October 2024, Peter Yuen was officially nominated as the Ontario Liberal candidate for Scarborough-Agincourt.[8]

In April 2025, he was nominated as the Liberal Party of Canada candidate for Markham—Unionville at 2025 Canadian federal election.[9][10] This was after the previous candidate, Paul Chiang, stepped down after suggesting that a Conservative candidate and Hong Kong activist, Joe Tay, should be turned over to Chinese police for a bounty.[9] Robert Fife of the Globe and Mail scrutinized Yuen for previously attending events with organizations linked to the Chinese Communist Party such as Jiangsu Commerce Council of Canada (JCCC) in which he was listed as an honorary director.[10] Yuen told the paper that he left the JCCC a decade ago.[10] In 2015, he reportedly attended a military parade in China hosted by Xi Jinping.[11]

Electoral record

More information Party, Candidate ...
2025 Canadian federal election: Markham—Unionville
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeMichael Ma27,05550.65+8.22
LiberalPeter Yuen25,13347.05–1.18
New DemocraticSameer Qureshi7231.35–5.20
GreenElvin Kao5060.95–1.84
Total valid votes/expense limit
Total rejected ballots
Turnout 53,41764.13
Eligible voters 83,289
Conservative notional gain from Liberal Swing +4.70
Source: Elections Canada[12][13]
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More information 2025 Ontario general election: Scarborough—Agincourt, Party ...
2025 Ontario general election: Scarborough—Agincourt
Party Candidate Votes%±%
Progressive ConservativeAris Babikian13,46849.39+0.36
LiberalPeter Yuen11,43041.91+4.64
New DemocraticFrancesca Policarpio1,3685.02–3.75
GreenStephanie LeBlanc5562.04–0.15
New BlueJohan Yogaretnam2490.91–0.11
Ontario PartyDonahue Morgan2000.73–0.99
Total valid votes 27,27199.32–0.13
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 1880.68+0.13
Turnout 27,45937.41–2.02
Eligible voters 73,404
Progressive Conservative hold Swing –2.14
Source: Elections Ontario[14][15]
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References

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