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Hundreds of charges laid, 173 guns seized in firearm trafficking operation, police say

42 people arrested, 442 criminal charges laid Dozens of people have been arrested and hundreds of criminal charges laid, police say, in connection with with a yearlong investigation into cross-border gun trafficking. At a news conference hosted by Toronto police Tuesday morning, investigators announced the arrest of 42 people, 442 criminal charges laid and the seizure of 173 guns in Canada and the United States. Three of those arrested are youths, police say. The joint forces investigation was conducted by Toronto police, York Regional Police, Durham Regional Police Service, Ontario ProvincialRead more


To fight or not to fight? Disagreement on Quebec Major Junior Hockey League ban

‘We need to protect our young players,’ says former player injured in 1987 fight “I proved to my coach that I can score a goal. Now I have to prove to him that I can fight.” That’s what was going through Dean Bergeron’s head on Aug. 15, 1987, when he was 17. The teenager was getting set to start his second season in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL). The Cataractes de Shawinigan were holding its training camp and anybody could be cut. During a scrimmage, Bergeron locked eyes with anRead more


‘Hate-motivated attack’ at Markham mosque provokes condemnation

Toronto man, 28, in custody following April 6 attack, police say Condemnation poured in Sunday in response to what the Islamic Society of Markham (ISM) said was “a hate-motivated attack” at its mosque earlier this week. In a statement Saturday night ISM said that on the morning of April 6, an individual came to the mosque on Denison Street and upon entering, apparently tore a copy of the Qur’an while directing racist and Islamophobic rants toward worshippers. “The individual, upon exiting the mosque, then attempted to run over or strike worshippers withRead more


Vianne Timmons removed as president of Memorial University

Board of regents made announcement Thursday afternoon in MUN’s Gazette Memorial University of Newfoundland’s governing body has removed president and vice-chancellor Vianne Timmons from her position. The move comes after Timmons announced on March 13 she was taking a voluntary, six-week paid leave of absence from the president’s office amid public scrutiny following a CBC News investigation into her statements on her Indigenous ancestry and past membership in an unrecognized Mi’kmaw First Nation group. In a statement to MUN’s Gazette on Thursday afternoon, board of regents chair Glenn Barnes announced Timmons is leaving as of Thursday.Read more


RCMP arrest 2 Canadian women after repatriation from camps in northeastern Syria

14 women and children arrived in Canada on Thursday The RCMP have arrested two Canadian women in Montreal after the government repatriated them from a camp in northeastern Syria for ISIS suspects and their families. The national police force said it’s seeking a terrorism peace bond as the women had their first court appearance on Thursday. Their lawyer, Lawrence Greenspon, said the peace bond would mean the women would have to live under certain conditions for up to a year. “What it demonstrates is that Canada has the ability to repatriate these women and childrenRead more


What fossil eggs found in Alberta reveal about how dinosaurs became birds

Chemical analysis of troodon eggshells show bird-like and reptile-like traits, reveal behaviour Seventy-five million years ago in southern Alberta, a river flooded, burying the eggs of bird-like dinosaurs nesting on the nearby plain. Now, tiny pieces of those fossil egg shells offer new evidence about how dinosaurs lived, bred and evolved into birds. A new study shows emu-sized, meat-eating troodons were as warm-blooded as birds, with body temperatures of more than 40 C. But unlike modern birds such as chickens that can produce one egg a day, troodons used a very slow egg-formingRead more


Dennis King’s Progressive Conservatives win a majority government on P.E.I.

Liberals poised to form Official Opposition as Greens lose all but 2 seats Dennis King will return for a second term as premier of Prince Edward Island after his Progressive Conservatives won 22 seats for a commanding victory in the 2023 provincial election. The Liberals won three seats and will form the Official Opposition, while the Greens fell to third-party status with just two MLAs. Voter turnout was a record low of 68.5 per cent of the province’s roughly 109,587 registered voters, according to Elections P.E.I. That’s down from the 77.66 per cent seen inRead more


Britain set to join trans-Pacific trade pact

Canada already part of Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership Britain is set to join a massive trade bloc that will likely speed up negotiations on a bilateral deal between Ottawa and London. The countries of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) have given the U.K. a green light to become the 12th country in the trading bloc, and the only one outside the Pacific Rim. “It’s a good day,” International Trade Minister Mary Ng said in an interview. “We have always been supportive of theRead more


‘Somebody is listening:’ Families of N.S. shooting victims hope final report brings change

Politicians, prime minister asked to champion recommendations For months, the families of the victims of Nova Scotia’s mass shooting in 2020 wondered if an inquiry would deliver answers. But some say they were “pleasantly surprised” Thursday to see strong criticism of the RCMP and clear recommendations for how to make Canadians safer. The Mass Casualty Commission released its lengthy report with 130 recommendations to a packed room in Truro, N.S. “We were pleasantly surprised,” said Darcy Dobson, daughter of victim Heather O’Brien. “We didn’t expect them to crack down so hard on theRead more


After school shooting, Tennessee gun laws likely to remain lax

As Nashville residents reeled from a fatal grade school shooting that left six dead, a federal judge quietly cleared the way to drop the minimum age for Tennesseans to carry handguns publicly without a permit to 18 — just two years after a new law set the age at 21. The move marked yet another relaxation of gun laws in ruby red Tennessee, where GOP leaders have steadily chipped away at firearms regulations and lambasted those who have warned that doing so comes at a cost. It’s a familiar sceneRead more


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