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A Nvidia chip is seen on screen as part of the inauguration of Europe's fastest supercomputer, Jupiter,  in Juelich, Germany, on Sept. 5, 2025.

A Chinese-born Canadian citizen who lives in Mississauga, Ont., was arrested in Virginia by the FBI and charged with trying to smuggle restricted high-tech Nvidia computer chips used in AI processing to China

U.S. authorities seized export-controlled technology worth about $30 million that was addressed to an air freight facility in Mississauga, close to Toronto Pearson International Airport, according to allegations filed in court.

Nvidia labels on the components had been removed and replaced with labels for a fake company, authorities said.

The arrest of Benlin Yuan, of Mississauga, immediately west of Toronto, and the large shipment destined for Toronto are part of Operation Gatekeeper, described by U.S. authorities as targeting “a sophisticated illicit procurement conspiracy and smuggling network that orchestrates buying and exporting controlled high-tech computer chips to China.”

Yuan is described in U.S. prosecution documents as president of an information technology company based in Virginia that provides data centre services and IT support and consulting in Canada and the United States. The documents say it is a subsidiary of a Chinese company based in Beijing.

He was arrested in Sterling, Virginia, on Nov. 28 and charged with conspiring to violate export control acts.

The network is accused of purchasing at least US$50 million worth of GPUs from a large U.S. technology company.

The computer products Yuan is alleged to be involved in exporting are Nvidia A100, H100, and H200 Tensor Core graphic processing units, known as GPUs, and HGX baseboards. The equipment is used in artificial intelligence (AI) applications and in high-performance computing. The chips can handle huge amounts of data that is needed in AI applications, an exploding field that is revolutionizing technology.

The GPUs can perform calculations at higher speeds than most previous computers.

Since about November 2023, a Chinese company has worked to import these chips from the United States, prosecutors allege. The entire plot is alleged to have involved US$160 million in tech goods.

Yuan is accused of joining the conspiracy this spring.

In a criminal complaint sworn by a special agent in the U.S. Department of Commerce, Yuan helped buy the technology using straw purchasers and intermediaries, meaning in the name of a person or company that is not the real end buyer.

The buyers allegedly declared the goods were for use by customers within the United States or in countries that do not require an export licence, including Taiwan and Thailand.

At various U.S. warehouses, Nvidia labels were allegedly removed from the computer circuits and relabeled with a fake manufacturing brand of SANDKYAN, according to the criminal complaint against Yuan.

When preparing the items for export, the shipping paperwork misclassified the products as harmless and unrestricted pieces of tech: “adapters,” “adapter modules,” and “computer controllers,” authorities claim.

They were then shipped, directly or indirectly, to China.

Investigators received a tip about pallets of suspicious GPUs at a New Jersey warehouse that were addressed to companies in China.

An undercover agent was sent inside, where he spent an hour.

The agent allegedly saw two engineers who appeared to be of Chinese origin unboxing Nvidia components. One of the engineers spoke to the undercover agent in Mandarin, documents say. The engineers said they had to cover up all of the Nvidia branding on the equipment for “export purposes,” court filings allege.

The agent watched Nvidia labels being pulled off and new ones for the fake firm put in their place. The next day the agent returned and found the boxes had been resealed. The products were now labeled as having been “Made in Taiwan.”

Not only were those packages addressed for shipping to Toronto, but warehouse employees told agents they recently had several similar tech exports to Canada.

The packages were removed and secured in a government warehouse. That sparked a flow of complaint calls and demand letters about the missing GPUs. The people expecting the goods believed the undercover officer had stolen the products and started negotiating to have them returned, authorities allege.

They offered $1 million to get their packages back, but insisted the equipment be inspected before payment was made.

Yuan is accused of organizing the “inspection.”

He is accused of recruiting and arranging the group of inspectors and of being one of the six who arrived to examine the packages, about two weeks after the seizure, court filings allege.

The inspection arrangements were allegedly planned in a group chat using an encrypted communication app and confirmed later over a video conferencing app.

Yuan was told by a high-level representative of the buyer in China to make sure no one said the items were destined for China, according to the criminal complaint. He is accused of helping them develop an elaborate “compliance backstory” to justify the products based on false information.

 NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang makes a presentation during the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference in Washington, DC, on Oct. 28, 2025.

They also allegedly discussed how to make the million-dollar payment and Yuan was told to send copies of the driver’s licences of everyone on the inspection team. Three trucks were arranged for the pick up.

He is also accused of handling the storage of a different shipment of Nvidia products destined for China. A cooperating witness for U.S. prosecutors alleged that Yuan told him not to put fake labels on this one as he thought they looked suspicious; he would rather the Nvidia labels just be removed.

Alexander Blanchard, a Virginia-based lawyer for Yuan, declined to comment about Yuan or the case when asked by National Post.

“Operation Gatekeeper has exposed a sophisticated smuggling network that threatens our nation’s security by funneling cutting-edge AI technology to those who would use it against American interests,” said Nicholas Ganjei, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Texas.

“These chips are the building blocks of AI superiority and are integral to modern military applications. The country that controls these chips will control AI technology; the country that controls AI technology will control the future.”

U.S. regulation restricts the export of items that could make a significant contribution to the military potential of other nations or could be detrimental to the foreign policy or national security of the United States.

Advanced computing integrated circuits, including certain Nvidia-manufactured GPUs were added to the export restriction list in 2022. Some of the latest Nvidia chips have been classed by the U.S. as “critical technologies” that China could use to “modernize its military capabilities in ways that threaten the national security interests of the United States and its allies,” according to export regulations.

The chips require a special licence to export to China.

On Monday, the same day Operation Gatekeeper was announced, U.S. President Donald Trump said the United States will allow Nvidia’s H200 processors to be exported to China with a 25 per cent fee.

Alan Hao Hsu, also known as Haochun Hsu, 43, of Missouri City, Texas, and his company both pleaded guilty to smuggling and unlawful export activities in October as part of Operation Gatekeeper.

Newly unsealed court documents say Hsu received more than US$50 million in wire transfers from China to help fund the scheme. He is scheduled for sentencing in February.

Fanyue Gong, also known as Tom Gong, 43, a citizen of China who lives in Brooklyn, New York, was also charged in the probe. He is described as the owner of a New York technology company. He was arrested in New York on Dec. 3, and charged with conspiring to smuggle goods out of the United States.

Five unnamed co-conspirators are linked to IT companies based in Hong Kong or Shenzhen, a city on the Pearl River that acts as a bridge between Hong Kong and mainland China.

• Email: ahumphreys@postmedia.com | X:

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Orkin Canada's rat map has no listings in Alberta or Saskatchewan.

It’s not exactly something to brag about, but Toronto leads the nation with the title of “rattiest” city, according to 

Orkin Canada

.

The pest control company tallied the number of rodent (rat and mice) treatments it performed from August of 2024 through the end of last July to come up with the ranking, which includes both residential and commercial treatments.

While Ontario’s capital took top spot, it was followed by a cluster of west coast locations. Victoria was second in terms of rat problems, then Vancouver and the nearby suburbs of Burnaby and Richmond, B.C. Rounding out the top 10 were Mississauga, Ont., Kelowna, B.C., Ottawa, Scarborough, Ont., and finally Moncton.

While the New Brunswick city was the only place outside Ontario and B.C. in the top 10, Orkin has helpfully tallied

regional registers

as well. Moncton takes top place in the Atlantic provinces, followed by Halifax, Saint John, N.B., St. John’s, Nfld., and Dartmouth, which is just outside of Halifax.

Meanwhile, Winnipeg was a respectable (by human standards) 13th on the list, while Saskatchewan and Alberta didn’t even show up at all. Alberta has famously been flying its “rat-free” flag

since 1950

and Saskatchewan has been trying to follow suit but isn’t quite there yet.

For the rest of us, Orkin has also published a list of techniques for rat mitigation. They include trimming your trees (shrubbery near your home can be a jumping-off point for rats to move in), eliminating outdoor moisture like clogged gutters or water in trash bins, and sealing up any cracks larger than a quarter of an inch, as well as putting weather strips on exterior doors. That and keep the place clean and keep an eye out for rodent droppings.

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Prime Minister Mark Carney talks to U.S. President Donald Trump at their arrival to the draw for the 2026 FIFA Football World Cup in Washington, DC, on December 5, 2025.

Mark Carney talked about his memorable Washington trip and how it was the first time he didn’t dance to Y.M.C.A. The quip came during

a conversation hosted by Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe

on Monday where the prime minister spoke about new government initiatives.

The popular disco song by The Village People has become an unofficial anthem for U.S. President Donald Trump. It was played during many of his rallies, and the group even sang it live

on the eve of Inauguration Day 2025

. Last week, the musical group hit the stage again in Washington, D.C. for another rendition with Carney in the audience during the FIFA World Cup final draw.

Carney was there alongside the other leaders from host countries U.S. and Mexico, Trump and Claudia Sheinbaum, respectively. The prime minister returned to Canada after the ceremony on Friday.

“It’s always fun to go to Washington,” said Sutcliffe during an almost hour-long conversation.

“Always fun,” responded Carney with a laugh. “Well, I don’t think I’m ever going to forget that experience. It’s the first time I haven’t danced to the Y.M.C.A. when it came on, but there you go.”

In

videos shared on social media

, Trump was seen mouthing the words and dancing.

The prime minister also commented on one soccer team in particular that made the crowd gasp while he was in conversation with 

Sutcliffe.

“We get the winner of one of the European playoffs. Potentially Italy, or if not Italy, someone better than Italy,” he said, as some members of the crowd gasped and laughed.

“Well, by definition,” said Carney, turning to the crowd. “That’s the way it works, right?”

He clarified, as the crowd continued laughing. “This is not like an overall judgment but — can we roll that back?” he joked.

“A team that beats Italy,” said Sutcliffe, “would therefore be better than Italy.”

Carney then switched back to discussing his recent time in Washington, saying that he got a sense of “the scale of what we’re welcoming to the country.”

“Up to a billion people watch that draw — wow,” he said. “Those are three hours they’re never going to get back… but that’s the level of excitement in and around it. The country is going to show exceptionally well.”

At the end of the conversation, Sutcliffe asked Carney what his outlook was for 2026 and beyond. The prime minister touched upon the ongoing tension between the United States and Canada.

 U.S. President Donald Trump, right, was non-committal when asked the possibility of resuming trade talks with Canada and Prime Minister Mark Carney, left.

“Canadians came together in the face of challenges, challenges directly from the United States, challenges more broadly. And once people got over the shock of the situation, the desire is just to get on with it, roll up our sleeves, work together and move forward. And that’s what we’re seeing,” he said.

“I’m hugely optimistic because what we’re realizing, myself included, is there are such a wide range of things that we can do. We can build our homes. We can build our defense industry. We can capitalize on photonics, on AI, beyond.”

He added that when he, the minister of international trade (Maninder Sidhu) or minister of finance (François Phillippe Champagne) go to meet with any country in the world — “with one exception,” he said, referring to the United States — “they want to do more business with Canada.”

“They are desperate to do more business with Canada,” he said, “because we have much of what they want, and they respect us.”

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A home for sale with signage stating

The latest annual report from real estate company Royal LePage is forecasting a modest hike in home prices of one per cent by the fourth quarter of 2026. But that overall figure is hiding a significant drop in two of Canada’s most expensive cities, Toronto and Vancouver.

Calling 2026 “a crucial reset year for Canada’s housing market,” the Royal LePage

Market Survey Forecast

predicts that the average price of a home in Canada is expected to rise to $823,016 in the fourth quarter of 2026. That figure includes single-family detached properties, which are expected to rise two per cent to $876,934, and condominiums, which are anticipated to decrease 2.5 per cent to $563,918.

Also hiding in the overall average are gains and losses in individual markets. For instance, the average home price in the greater Toronto area is expected to fall 4.5 per cent next year, while greater Vancouver is expected to see a drop of 3.5 per cent.

Montreal, on the other hand, is forecast to rise five per cent. And Quebec City is forecast to see the highest gains among all major regions in 2026, with the average home price expected to rise 12 per cent.

“Solid market fundamentals — including lower interest rates, increased supply, and reduced competition — have created a more favourable environment for consumers,” said Phil Soper, president and CEO of Royal LePage, in announcing the figures.

“First-time buyers and those searching in the country’s most expensive regions have a rare window to act on their home ownership plans at reduced prices.”

This year saw a lowering of interest rates, as the Bank of Canada reduced its target for the overnight lending rate four times.

The prime rate

that banks use to set mortgage rates is now at 4.45 per cent.

The Royal LePage report notes that, after an 18-month rate-cutting cycle following two-decade-high interest rates, “the Bank has now shifted its focus to supporting a cooling economy while keeping inflation on a sustainable path.” It adds that economists widely expect the Bank of Canada will only make further cuts if the economy shows major signs of weakness as Canada continues to navigate trade tensions with the United States.

“Mortgage rates are no longer the villain in this story,” said Soper. “Borrowing costs have stabilized at a level that supports healthy market activity. Buyers can move forward without worrying they are missing out on cheaper money tomorrow. That clarity alone will unlock demand.”

In a survey

conducted this summer

, Royal LePage found that, of renters who were holding off on buying a property, 40 per cent said they were waiting for housing prices to fall, while 29 per cent said they were delaying until interest rates declined.

Outside of Toronto and Vancouver,

every major market

is expected to see an increase in home prices, although in each case it will be driven more by single-family detached dwellings, where the price hike will outstrip that for condos.

In Quebec City, for instance, the overall expected rise of 12 per cent was driven by a five per cent increase in condo prices but a 14 per cent rise in detached homes. In Montreal, the overall rise of five per cent included a six per cent jump in detached homes and a more modest 2.5 per cent climb in condo prices. And in Halifax, an overall increase of two per cent comprised a four per cent rise in detached homes but a two per cent drop in condominium prices.

In other markets, Calgary and Winnipeg are forecast to see the smallest jump in prices, at 1.5 per cent, followed by Edmonton and Ottawa (two per cent) and Regina at four per cent.

Soper applauded the government’s commitment to housing and infrastructure projects in the latest federal budget, but said it remained to be seen how those decisions would play out.

“If Ottawa follows through, 2026 could be the year we start to see long-promised initiatives turn into real progress for the Canadian real estate industry.” he said.

He added: “2026 will be a transition year for Canada’s housing market, as improved affordability and less competitive conditions continue to favour buyers. We expect activity to build slowly over the next several months, and if the spring market coincides with steadier economic and trade conditions, buyer confidence could strengthen in tandem.”

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Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet.

OTTAWA — After a week of delays and uncertainty, the Liberals say a deal is back on the rails with the Bloc Québécois to remove religious exemptions from Canada’s hate-speech laws in exchange for support to help pass the government’s bill targeting hate and terror symbols.

A senior government source confirmed to National Post that the Liberals on the House of Commons justice committee, which is currently doing a clause-by-clause study of Bill C-9, are expected to support a Bloc amendment to the legislation that will remove the controversial exemption during a Tuesday afternoon meeting.

“Anything can happen at committee, but… we’ll be voting for it,” said the source about the Bloc amendment. They were granted anonymity to discuss inter-party negotiations freely.

Last week, National Post reported that the Bloc and Liberals had struck a deal that would see the government approve an amendment to Bill C-9 that removes the religious exemption for willful promotion of hate from the Criminal Code. In exchange, the Bloc committed to supporting the bill through the House of Commons.

A deal with the Bloc is likely the only way the Liberals can get the bill through committee, as the Conservatives have vowed to oppose it.

But after the report, the deal appeared suddenly to be on shaky ground as both meetings of the Justice committee last week where the amendment was expected to be debated were either cancelled or suspended by the Liberals.

Liberal committee chair

James Maloney said at the time

he cancelled the meeting to allow MPs to “regroup and find a path forward” as “emotions were running high.” At the same time, the government faced a groundswell of opposition to the amendment by various Muslim, Christian and civil rights groups.

After the second planned committee meeting last week was cancelled at the last minute, the Bloc Québécois accused the Liberals of reneging on a deal they said originally came from Justice Minister Sean Fraser himself.

“The Liberals are abandoning their deal with the Bloc and are abandoning Quebecers. They are pulling the plug on C-9,” Bloc justice critic Rhéal Fortin said in the House of Commons Monday. “How are they going to justify this about-face after so many broken promises?”

In a statement Tuesday, Bloc Québécois spokesperson Julien Coulombe-Bonnafous confirmed Tuesday’s justice committee meeting was going forward.

“If there is no parliamentary obstruction, the Bloc Québécois amendment to remove the religious exemption for hate speech should be discussed,” he said.

Currently, the Criminal Code exempts individuals from charges of willful promotion of hate or antisemitism if the speech is based in good faith on the interpretation of a religious text.

Eliminating the religious exemption is supported by Jewish and LGBTQ groups, the Bloc as well as the Quebec government, who have called for its removal repeatedly since 2023. They all say religion should not be used as a cover for antisemitic or hateful speech.

But news of the Liberals agreeing to remove the religious exemption generated significant backlash from Muslim, Christian and civil liberties groups as well as the Conservatives, who described it as an attack on both freedom of speech and religion. They have argued that it risks criminalizing individuals speaking about their faith.

Bill C-9, which fulfilled a campaign promise Prime Minister Mark Carney made during the spring election, was his minority government’s first major justice bill introduced earlier this fall by Justice Minister Sean Fraser.

It seeks multiple changes to the Criminal Code to confront the issue of hate, with the Liberals citing a rise in police-reported incidents in recent years, particularly in the wake of sustained anti-Israel protests over the last two years.

More to come…

National Post

cnardi@postmedia.com

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The FBI and U.S. Embassy in Mexico released new images of former Canadian Olympic snowboarder-turned alleged violent drug operation leader.

The U.S. authorities released two photos of former Canadian Olympian Ryan Wedding, alleged to be the leader of a violent narco cartel on Monday.

The FBI, which has ranked the Thunder Bay, Ont. native among its Top Ten Fugitives,

posted on X

what it called “a new obtained photograph” of him lying in bed shirtless, a large lion tattoo visible on his chest.

Wedding is sporting a scruffy beard with his short, cropped hair revealing a receding hairline.

It’s unclear whether the image was a selfie or snapped by another person, but the agency said it believes it was taken this summer in Mexico, where they believe Wedding has been hiding.

Meanwhile,

a video posted to X

by the U.S. Embassy in Mexico featured another image of Wedding with a shaved head and wearing a green t-shirt while standing against a neutral gray background, similar to a passport or driver’s license photo.

The 44-year-old former snowboarder who competed for Canada at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City is suspected of running a transnational drug-trafficking network shipping cocaine from Colombia, through Mexico — under the alleged protection of the Sinaloa Cartel — and into the U.S. and Canada. Wedding, whose 18 known aliases include “El Jefe,” “Giant,” and “Public Enemy, was indicted last June.

In November, the FBI increased its reward for information leading to Wedding’s arrest to US$15 million from the $10 million first announced when he was added to the Top Ten list in March.

Another Canadian, 34-year-old Andrew Clark of Toronto, suspected to be Wedding’s second in command in Mexico, was indicted at the same time and arrested by Mexican authorities in October. Known as “The Dictator,” he was later extradited to the U.S., where he remains in custody.

The pair are also accused of carrying out several murders and one attempted murder to protect their criminal organization. Canadian police have said several of the people gunned down were victims of mistaken identity.

Among them were husband and wife Jagtar and Harbhajan Sidhu of Caledon, northwest of Toronto, whom U.S. court documents alleged were innocent people erroneously killed in retaliation for the theft of a drug shipment.

Their 13-year-old daughter was also shot 13 times but survived.

U.S. authorities also accuse the duo of ordering the murder of 39-year-old Mohammed Zafar, who was shot while seated in his car in the driveway of a Brampton home in May 2024, allegedly over a drug debt.

An indictment unsealed this November included the names of seven other Canadians implicated in Wedding’s illicit activities, among them Ontario lawyer Deepak Paradkar.

The dual Canadian-Indian is accused of advising Wedding and Clark to order the murder of a witness set to testify against him and force his extradition to the U.S.

“Wedding placed a bounty on the victim’s head in the erroneous belief that the victim’s death would result in the dismissal of criminal charges against him and his international drug trafficking ring and would further ensure that he was not extradited to the United States,” Bilal A. Essayli, an assistant U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California, said at a press conference. “He was wrong.”

Also named by U.S. officials was 31-year-old Gursewak Singh Bal of Mississauga, founder and operator of the Dirty News website. It’s alleged that another Canadian member and associate of Wedding’s organization paid Bal $10,000 not to post about Wedding and Clark but to post the witness’s photo instead so he could be located. It’s unclear whether the sum was in American or Canadian dollars.

Other Canadians named in the indictment and since arrested along with Paradkar and Bal include Atna Ohna, 40, of Laval, Que., also known as “Tupac” and “Kim Jong Un”; Allistair Chapman, 33, of Calgary, also known as “Ali Star”; Ahmad Nabil Zitoun, 35, of Edmonton; Edwin Basora-Hernandez, 31, of Montreal; and Rolan Sokolovski, 37, of Toronto, also known as “The Jew” and “Sushi.”

Two additional Canadians with ties to Wedding’s organization being sought by U.S. authorities are Rasheed Pascua Hossain, 32, of Vancouver, also known as “Sheed,” and Tommy Demorizi, 35, of Montreal, who is believed to be a fugitive in the Dominican Republic.

All of those arrested in Canada on allegations in the U.S. face extradition hearings to determine if they will be turned over to U.S. authorities to face trial.

— With files from Adrian Humphreys

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Justice Minister Sean Fraser rises during question period on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Sept. 23, 2025.

OTTAWA

— Federal Justice Minister Sean Fraser tabled a new crime bill on Tuesday, seeking to stiffen punishments for offences committed against children and women, while also proposing to restore mandatory minimum sentences for a slew of offences. 

The 167-page bill includes proposals to criminalize a pattern of behaviour seen in abusive relationships known as “coercive control,” and also declare that when a woman is murdered in the context of a controlling intimate partner relationship, which could include sexual violence and hate, that homicide be regarded as first-degree murder.

The change also includes referring to these murders as “femicide,” which was a promise that Prime Minister Mark Carney made during the spring election campaign.

The bill also fulfills his campaign commitment to include as part of the offence against the non-consensual distribution of intimate images, those which are “a visual representation” of someone that could be mistaken as real, which refers to the practice of using generative AI to make what are commonly known as sexualized “deepfakes.”

The legislation also seeks to respond to a recent Supreme Court ruling that struck down the one-year mandatory minimum sentences for the access and possession of child-sex abuse images, known as child pornography.

The Opposition Conservatives and other critics decried the top court’s decision at the time, calling on Fraser to use the notwithstanding clause in the Charter to allow the Liberal government to uphold the minimum sentencing requirement.

Tuesday’s bill responds by trying to safeguard remaining mandatory minimum sentences and include a change that states courts may allow an offender to serve less time, “but only if the mandatory minimum term of imprisonment would amount to cruel and unusual punishment,” for that specific offence.

The legislation also proposes to try addressing the issue of court cases being tossed due to an accused’s right to a trial not being met within a reasonable timeframe by directing that courts consider other options rather than granting a stay of proceedings.

The Canadian Civil Liberties Association released a statement on Tuesday, saying the bill attempts to overturn “

nearly 40 years of Supreme Court precedent” and removes the “strongest constraint requiring the justice system to run on time.”

“The federal government’s proposal to gut the (Charter right)
to be tried in a reasonable time is unconstitutional and punts the hard work of resolving delay,” Shakir Rahim, who directs the association’s criminal justice program, said in a statement. 

National Post

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The courthouse in Iqaluit, Nunavut.

A Nunavut judge knocked nearly two years off the sentence for an Inuit man convicted of trying to choke a woman to death because she stood up for his abused sister-in-law, citing his Indigenous status, mental illness and the fact that a shorter sentence would not require him to leave Canada’s northernmost territory to serve the remainder of his time behind bars.

Laimiki Toonoo was sentenced in the Nunavut Court of Justice to eight years and two months in prison for the attempted murder of Ovilu Saila.

“Given that this case involved a conviction after trial, the Crown submission of 10-12 years was reasonable and appropriate. Indeed, I would have imposed a sentence of 10 years if it was not for the mitigating factors of Laimiki’s major mental illness, his significant Gladue factors, and the fact that a territorial term going forward was within the range of sentence given his lengthy pre-trial custody, and that that form of sentence made a lengthy probation order available,” Justice Christian Lyons wrote in a recent decision out of Iqaluit.

Gladue principles were set out in a Supreme Court of Canada decision over a quarter century back and indicate sentencing judges must consider the unique circumstances of Indigenous offenders, as well as systemic issues like the impact of residential schools, to address the over-representation of Indigenous people in Canada’s prisons.

“Laimiki’s assault on Ovilu was unprovoked, and senseless. In a cowardly display, Laimiki and his brother, Archie, two grown men under the influence of alcohol, attacked a sober Ovilu because she stood up for Archie’s spouse after Archie became abusive towards her,” Lyons said.

“The attack was lengthy and persistent and took place in the presence of Archie’s spouse and their four young children.”

The court heard that Laimiki “choked Ovilu for many minutes and managed to do so despite a spirited effort from Ovilu to defend herself,” said the decision, dated Dec. 3.

“Ovilu eventually became unconscious due to the choking and Laimiki continued choking her with the intent to kill her. While he did this, Archie told Laimiki to stop, but Laimiki said he would not, because Ovilu was not dead yet, and was still breathing.”

Laimiki then told his brother they “could hang Ovilu, and Archie again told him to stop. There was further discussion between Archie and Laimiki about hanging Ovilu, and Laimiki said they could hang Ovilu and pretend that she hung herself,” said the decision.

“Laimiki then tied a phone charger cord tightly around Ovilu’s neck and then tied a scarf to the cord. The purpose of this was to attach something long enough to her neck so she could be hung from a heavy bolt embedded in a wooden beam above her head. He then applied sufficient force to the cord to snap it. Whether or not she was actually hung is unknown.”

Ovilu “regained consciousness sometime after the cord snapped and Laimiki continued to attempt to assault her as Archie was on the phone with the police reporting that a woman was hanging,” said the decision.

“Laimiki then fled, and Ovilu was able to escape the home, and went immediately to the RCMP detachment with the cord still tied tightly to her neck.”

The 2021 attack in Kinngait, a Dorset Island hamlet, left Ovilu with “significant swelling and bruising to her face, a cord indentation around her neck, and redness and scratches to her neck area,” said the decision. “It also had a deep emotional impact on her.”

Laimiki Toonoo has a criminal record with 14 convictions spanning from 2017-2021, said the decision, which notes three are for violent offences.

“This is a significant criminal record for a man who was only 23 years old when he went into custody for the attack on Ovilu, and it spans his entire adult life up until that point,” Lyons said. “I further note that in 2023, a year and a half after being incarcerated, he was released on bail, only to be arrested 12 days later on new, unrelated charges, and remanded back into custody.”

Laimiki Toonoo “has experienced significant trauma and loss, and has had a difficult life,” said the judge.

“He has a long-standing diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder, which is the result of what was described in the records, as a ‘chaotic childhood,’” said the judge.

“His father died when he was eight years old, and it is clear that this has had a significant impact on Laimiki.”

After his father died, Laimiki told the court he was on his own. He “called himself an ‘abandoned kid,’ staying variously with his mother and at friend’s homes,” said the decision.

One of his brothers died by suicide and another drowned, said the decision.

“Laimiki is an Indigenous man, and these life experiences are significant Gladue factors that are mitigating on sentence,” said the judge.

Laimiki Toonoo sometimes experiences “auditory hallucinations” that “urge him to harm others,” said the decision. “A month after his attempted murder of Ovilu, Laimiki broke his hand punching another inmate, and it was said that he did so in response to an auditory command hallucination.”

Since attacking another inmate in 2021, “Laimiki has been stabilized in custody, as he has been medicated and kept free from alcohol and illicit drug use,” said the decision.

Laimiki has been in custody since the attempted murder, “save for the 12 days he was released on bail in 2023, and therefore has credit for more than four years in jail,” Lyons said.

His defence lawyer asked for a six-year sentence, which would have worked out to time served when the enhanced credit for pre-sentence custody was taken into account.

The Crown argued that “given the aggravating factors, and Laimiki’s high risk of reoffending, that a penitentiary term going forward is necessary. They argue that such a sentence would more effectively protect the public from Laimiki as he would be separated from society for a longer period, and more likely to be rehabilitated.”

But the remainder of his sentence is two years less a day, which allows him to serve it in Nunavut.

“The imposition of a territorial sentence allows me to put Mr. Toonoo on a lengthy probation order following his release, that requires him to meet with mental health workers, and psychiatrists, and to not drink alcohol or consume illicit drugs,” Lyons said. “This would not be an available option to me if I were to impose a further federal sentence of two years or more.”

He’s getting “effective treatment for his mental illness and has a level of comfort there,” the judge said of the Iqaluit jail.

“He reported feeling more alive in custody, and that he has learned to respect others. He is surrounded by other Inuit, and is much closer to home, and has access to programs.”

Toonoo’s brother, Archie, was sentenced to two years of probation last month for his role in the attack.

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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre rises during question period on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Monday, Dec. 8, 2025.

OTTAWA — Conservatives are planning to force a debate and a vote in the House of Commons Tuesday about

the recent deal struck by Ottawa and Alberta to build a new oil pipeline on the West Coast

, in hopes of exposing divisions inside the Liberal caucus.

The motion, brought forward by Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, calls on MPs to “take note” of the memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Alberta struck on Nov. 27 and to support the construction of “one or more pipelines” to export bitumen to Asian markets.

Borrowing from the original text of the MOU, the motion also mentions the possibility of an “appropriate adjustment” to the Oil Tanker Moratorium Act — which the B.C. government and many Liberal MPs in the province are opposed to — to make this pipeline happen.

“In the spirit of Christmas, I decided to take a great act of generosity and lift the words right out of the prime minister’s MOU in order to support a pipeline to the Pacific, and a repeal or an overriding of the Liberal tanker ban,” said Poilievre during Monday’s question period.

Natural Resources Minister Tim Hodgson replied: “In the spirit of Christmas, I’d invite the leader of the Opposition not to cherry-pick parts of the MOU but to support the entire MOU, which is what all of the Conservative premiers across this country are doing.”

So far, Liberal MPs have not said if they would be supporting this motion or not but expressed annoyance at the idea that they would be forced to take a public stance.

Corey Hogan, one of two Liberal MPs in Alberta, accused the Conservatives of playing “political games” which he thinks could jeopardize the existence of a pipeline.

“This is a motion that is designed to provoke and to divide,” he said.

Sukh Dhaliwal, a Liberal MP from Surrey, B.C., said “just watch” when asked how he would vote on the motion. He however called on all MPs to support the MOU because it creates economic opportunities for Albertans, British Columbians and Indigenous peoples.

Former environment minister Steven Guilbeault has already resigned from cabinet over the Alberta MOU and other more progressive Liberal MPs have criticized the deal.

In a video, Vancouver MP Patrick Weiler called the deal is a “big setback”

in terms of climate policy, while his colleague

Taleeb Noormohamed wrote on X that “any project

that goes through the Major Projects Office MUST have B.C. and First Nations consent.”

The Government House leader’s office declined to say if the vote on the motion, set to happen around 6:30 p.m. Eastern, would be “whipped” — which means that all Liberal MPs would be forced to vote with the government.

National Post

calevesque@postmedia.com

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A car travels along Highway 20 in British Columbia. Roger's new satellite service means customers won’t lose their signal, even in remote locations across Canada.

Rogers Communications on Tuesday announced the rollout of a new satellite-to-mobile service, the first of its kind in Canada. Rogers Satellite provides voice and video calling and a number of popular apps for weather and navigation information, vastly increasing the company’s coverage.

“This is really an important technology that’s a game changer for our industry,” Rogers CEO Tony Staffieri told National Post in an interview. “We’re really excited about this.”

Canada has decent cell service in its large population centres, although even those feature the odd dead zone. But away from major cities, there can be little to no connectivity.

Meaghan Oosterhoff knew that when she signed up for a

beta test of the new service

in July. The mother of three young children lives in Brant County, in southern Ontario, but has relatives in northern Manitoba.

“I use it for work and for when I visit home,” she told National Post. “I work in forestry services, and part of that involves going to remote destinations, mostly in the bush. So I use it to keep in contact with my kids while I’m away.”

Her grandmother lives outside the town of Roblin, Man., which is itself 400 kms northwest of Winnipeg. She said the unmarked roads mean getting there is a mix of written instructions and memory, “like turn left at the boulder … that sort of thing.”

She recalled a visit last Christmas in sub-zero temperatures, bringing her youngest child to meet her grandmother for the first time. “Before we go into the dead zone, we have our family chat, and we say, ‘OK, we’re going in. If you don’t hear from us in the next, you know, 45 minutes to an hour, send the search party.’”

She said this Christmas will be less stressful, regardless of the weather.

“I’m not worried at all about my next visit home,” she said. “With WhatsApp for the family chat, and Google Maps — just being able to ping where we’re at and have access to that map instead of the hand-drawn instructions.” She laughs: “I don’t know about you, but my geography skills aren’t the strongest.”

Brian Carriere, another beta-version tester, has a similar story. He’s a forestry worker on Vancouver Island, and said the new service lets him keep in touch with his two teenaged daughters, and also get instant updates from his employer without having to go hunting for a cell signal or a wifi hotspot.

“If my coworker is driving, I can be updating my employer on where we’re at, where we’re going, and receive instantaneous reply while we’re on the move.”

There’s a public safety aspect to the service as well, he added.

“Where I work, on the drive to Tofino, there’s no cell service, and there’s tons of accidents on that road all the time. A lot of situations would have been resolved sooner had somebody been able to call 911 or text 911.”

Oosterhoff echoed that thought. “Last summer during the wildfires, our communities were affected a lot. And just being able to have that peace of mind, like, OK, we can track each other, we know where we are, if there’s any travelling between communities or evacuations or anything like that, it’s nice to know that. Next summer, we’ll have a better track on where we all are.”

During the trial, Rogers calculated that customers sent over a million satellite text messages.

Staffieri noted that

T-Mobile in the U.S.

launched a similar service for its customers in October.

“T-Mobile is one of those that we’ve been working with,” he said. “They’re a few months ahead of us as a result of satellite preparedness for the U.S. relative to Canada … but we’re closely following, learning from some of the things they’re finding, and making sure that as we go to market and launch this, that we have the best information possible to make this the best experience for Canadians.”

He noted that the new service will give Rogers three times the coverage of any other Canadian wireless provider. Though even at that, there’s room to expand.

A map of Rogers’ coverage

shows the satellite area blanketing Canada, but only as far north as the 58th parallel, roughly the latitude of Churchill, Man.

“As we expand on our satellite capabilities then it’ll cover the Far North,” Staffierai said. “Those satellites haven’t been launched yet, but … as they come into production, we’ll ensure that we bring it to Canadians as quickly as possible.”

He added that the coverage area also includes vast inland bodies of water like James Bay, as well as the oceans off the east and west coasts. “For the industries that are out there, this is a pretty important technology for those cases as well.”

Even in less remote locations, the new service means customers who might have had calls drop out on the odd dead zone along the 400 or 401 highways won’t lose their signal there.

The new service is included in some Rogers plans and can be added to others for $10 a month, or $15 for non-Rogers customers. The company’s intent is to expand the service next year to support further data and voice services, including 911 voice services across the country.

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