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The People’s Joker, queer film set in Gotham City, pulled from TIFF over copyright concerns

Movie pulled after premiere in festival’s Midnight Madness program The People’s Joker, an unauthorized reimagining of Batman’s universe through the eyes of a transgender woman, has been pulled from the Toronto International Film Festival over rights issues after a single screening. TIFF says on its website that the filmmaker pulled the Gotham City-set independent movie over the concerns, and the customer relations team will get in touch with ticketholders. Neither representatives for The People’s Joker nor Warner Bros. Discovery, which holds the film rights to the DC Comics universe, immediately responded to aRead more


Toronto spa killer pleads guilty to murder in deadly sword attack, cites van attacker as ‘inspiration’ Social Sharing

Warning: This story contains graphic details The man behind an incel-inspired attack at a Toronto massage parlour two years ago has pleaded guilty to charges of murder and attempted murder — citing the man responsible for the city’s deadly van attack as “inspiration.” The accused, who was 17 at the time of the killing, cannot be named under the Youth Criminal Justice Act. Now 20, he made his plea at Ontario Superior Court before Justice Suhail Akhtar on Wednesday morning, where court heard he had been thinking of carrying out his violent actions for months. SlumpedRead more


Coalition on climate adaptation says Canada needs hard targets on disaster resilience

Call comes from diverse groups including Canadian Chamber of Commerce, local governments and researchers A broad coalition on climate adaptation and disaster resilience says air conditioning should become a human right on par with winter heating — one of a series of hard targets it says Canada needs to meet in the next few years as climate change impacts increase. “We’re focusing on the immediate term,” said Blair Feltmate, head of the University of Waterloo’s Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation. “What is still missing with the federal government is aRead more


Chair of N.S. shooting inquiry worries budget constraints could impede RCMP watchdog

Comments arose during a panel discussion of police accountability The chairman of Nova Scotia’s mass shooting inquiry has raised concerns that budget constraints could tether investigations by the watchdog agency that oversees complaints against the RCMP. Michael MacDonald asked participants in an online roundtable discussion in Dartmouth, N.S., Wednesday whether funding concerns are a “blatant affront” to the independence of the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP. While the oversight agency has the power to start its own inquiries, agency chairperson and panel member Michelaine Lahaie confirmed she must send aRead more


Ottawa has lost control of $150M program for reimbursing veterans’ cannabis: audit

Number of veterans seeking reimbursement for medical pot grew from 100 in 2014 to more than 18,000 last year An internal audit by Veterans Affairs Canada suggests the federal government has all but lost control as it shells out hundreds of millions of dollars for veterans’ medical marijuana each year without proper oversight, direction or evidence of health benefits. Quietly published this week, the audit’s results come amid an explosion in the number of veterans seeking reimbursement for their medical pot, from around 100 in 2014 to more than 18,000Read more


Northern Alberta First Nation suing province over cumulative environmental effects

Duncan’s First Nation using arguments similar to those used successfully last year by B.C. group A northern Alberta First Nation has filed what experts say is the province’s first lawsuit claiming cumulative effects from industry, agriculture and settlement are so pervasive, they violate the band’s treaty rights. Duncan’s First Nation, southwest of Peace River, a town located about 500 kilometres north of Edmonton, alleges the province has permitted so much activity and sold off so much Crown land that band members can only live their constitutionally guaranteed way of life withRead more


Yukon’s First Nation School Board brings culture to the classroom in inaugural year

Eight schools have officially joined the board. Students of any background can attend Lauren Wallingham and her daughter Leah walk on a wooded path from their home in Whitehorse to Takhini Elementary School, where Leah is beginning Grade 2. Leah says she’s nervous to meet her new teacher — but something else is new at the school this year, as well. Eight schools in the Yukon, including Leah’s, have officially joined the First Nation School Board — the first of its kind in Canada — after a historic referendum vote last January. NowRead more


Parole records reveal Saskatchewan suspect’s violent history Social Sharing

Myles Sanderson was ordered to stay away from alcohol, drugs Long before he became the main suspect in a mass killing and the subject of a multi-province alert, Myles Sanderson had a history of explosive violence, according to Parole Board of Canada documents from February of this year. Sanderson’s contacts with the criminal justice system span more than two decades. As an adult, he racked up 59 convictions for assault, assault with a weapon, uttering threats, assaulting a police officer and robbery. Roughly half of the offences were for breaches or failure toRead more


Alberta men accused in plot to murder Mounties saw undercover cops as ‘girls’ who could help: court records

Female undercover officers befriended protesters acting as ‘security’ for Coutts border blockade Newly released records show police believed the Alberta men now accused of plotting to murder RCMP officers debated having two women smuggle a hockey bag filled with guns into a protest against pandemic-related restrictions, suggesting they would go unnoticed by police because they were “girls.” However, those two women were actually undercover police officers. The next day, RCMP launched a rare “imminent harm” wiretap, which is permitted to be executed without a judge’s sign-off when there is an immediateRead more


Alberta’s new teacher registry criticized for outing trans people

Critics also worried domestic abuse survivors with new names are at risk Some teachers initially included in a new provincial registry say the government’s publication of all their legal names could lead to discrimination, harassment and safety issues. When the government’s new teacher registry went live last week, Calgary teacher, consultant and PhD student Jamie Anderson found an unwelcome surprise — his birth name, listed underneath his legal name. Anderson is trans. His former name is a legal identity he no longer uses. “Being outed and people having access to thatRead more


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