LP_468x60
on-the-record-468x60-white

Canada's skeleton team refutes allegations one of its coaches manipulated the Olympic qualification points system to end a U.S. competitor Katie Uhlaender's hopes of competing at a sixth Games.

The Canadian federation for the sport of skeleton is defending a decision to withdraw athletes from an international event on Sunday, a move a former U.S. Olympic athlete and two-time world champion alleges torpedoed her chance of attending a sixth Games.

According to a statement from Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton, four of the program’s “younger athletes” were removed from a North American Cup race in Lake Placid, N.Y., an event on the lower-tier developmental circuit’s calendar where competitors from any nation can earn points to qualify for the upcoming Milan Cortina Games in Italy.

BCS said the racers, “relatively new to the sport,” had already “experienced a particularly challenging week on the track,” and it was decided, in consultation with two International Bobsled and Skeleton Federation (ISBF) officials, that it was in the best interest of the athlete and the program to remove them from the third race of the week.

In interviews with the

London Times

and

DW

, five-time U.S. Olympian Katie Uhlaender alleges that Canadian coach Joe Cecchini, whom she identified as “a friend of 20 years,” revealed his plan to her in a courtesy phone call two days before. He allegedly said his goal was to “eliminate any possibilities” of another senior Canadian competitor missing the Olympics — identified by DW as two-time Canadian Olympian Jane Channell — by protecting the national team’s ISBF ranking.

“He did not have to do that. He did it because he could. And it wasn’t to protect his athletes; it was to manipulate the system,” said Uhlaender, who has never medalled at previous Olympics. “He waited until after everyone was registered and gave the illusion that the Canadians were going to be competing. He wanted to make sure that we could not get full points.”

National Post has contacted Uhlaender for comment.

Under

its rules

, qualification is calculated using points earned at sanctioned events, where the number of athletes who start a race directly determines how many points can be awarded. The qualification window closes next Sunday, drastically reducing a given athlete’s ability to earn required points.

As it happens, Uhlaender would win gold in Sunday’s race, but a field of 21 competitors left her short on points. The 41-year-old is

ranked

20th globally, but third among U.S. sliders, leaving her outside of the Olympic picture. (The top-ranked Canadian sliders are 21-year-old Hallie Clarke, who is 12th overall, and Channell, currently ranked 26th and clinging to an Olympic berth heading into this weekend’s final World Cup event before the Olympics.)

 Canada’s Jane Channell competing at the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea.

“I hadn’t let go of the dream yet,” Uhlaender told the Times. “I don’t get to have a shot now. It was over before I had a chance.”

Uhlaender also claims that Cecchini, who competed for Italy at the 2018 Games, said it wasn’t his responsibility to “uplift” the competition.

DW, meanwhile, obtained an email reported sent by Cecchini to Canadian team members that framed the decision as being “in the best interests of the national team,” aimed at understanding the qualification points scenarios and managing confirmed start numbers.

In emails to National Post, the ISBF said it would reserve comment while its integrity unit investigates the incident, while the U.S. federation said it will await that decision.

In its statement, BCS said it knows the athletes’ removal had an impact, but “it is well understood within the sport that development circuits do not carry fixed points.”

“The National Skeleton Program has always treated the development circuit as exactly that — a developmental environment — not a pathway for Olympic qualification.”

“BCS remains confident that its actions were appropriate, transparent, and aligned with both athlete welfare and the integrity of the sport.”

The federation said Uhlaender’s allegation that the young Canadians wanted to race and were scared to tell Cecchini “could not be further from the truth.”

According to the Times, U.S. head coach Andrew Blasser and three other national coaches sent the International Olympic Committee athletes’ commission a formal complaint warning of what they called potential “sport manipulation and unethical conduct.”

It alleges that the Canadian athletes had been registered and reported to the track that day only to be told they were being withdrawn. The coaches argued that the late exits appeared designed to push the field below the threshold for full participation points, thereby putting athletes from multiple countries at a disadvantage.

DW later identified the others as coaches for Denmark, Israel and Malta.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


Photographs of Israeli hostages taken by Hamas terrorists on a house destroyed by Hamas in Kibbutz Be'eri, Israel, on Dec. 20, 2023.

Less than 40 per cent of CBC’s reporting on the Israel-Hamas conflict was “balanced or neutral,” finds a new study by a Jewish advocacy group.

B’nai Brith Canada also found that more than 50 per cent of CBC’s news articles and videos included in the study met its threshold for pro-Palestinian bias, while less than seven per cent met the threshold for pro-Israel bias. This was based on a sample of 299 items published between Oct. 1, 2024 to April 30, 2025.

The pieces reviewed included reporting on military operations, humanitarian conditions, diplomatic initiatives, hostage negotiations and Canadian domestic implications, such as protests or antisemitic-related incidents.

The purpose of the report is to evaluate “whether CBC’s English-language online coverage during that period met public-broadcaster expectations of balance and impartiality.”

“For generations, CBC has been a fixture in Canadian homes: trusted, valued, and woven into our national life. This is not about factual inaccuracies or intentional distortions. It’s about what Canadians deserve: a public broadcaster they can count on for neutral, impartial, and fair reporting,” the group wrote in a post on X about the study.

“It’s time for the CBC to regain that trust.”

B’nai Brith Canada said it was requesting a meeting to review the study’s findings with CBC.

“We routinely get requests by special interest groups interested in meeting with us in order to influence our coverage of the news,” Chuck Thompson told National Post. He is CBC’s head of public affairs.

“We generally decline these requests in order to safeguard the independence of our journalism. However, we are open to criticism and will review this report closely as we do all public and private communication.”

While the CBC’s recurring patterns of framing, contextual omission, presentation, and sourcing are “consistent” with the dynamics of conflict reporting, the study says, such patterns should not be found in the context of Canadian public broadcasting.

That is at the heart of the issue, researchers explained, and “raises questions about institutional practices and standards.”

The CBC has faced

scrutiny about its coverage

of Israel-Hamas conflict from many in the Jewish community since Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas terrorists murder 1,200 people and took 251 hostages, sparking a war in the Middle East.

In February,

an intervention was filed

over “continuing concerns about the CBC’s pattern of inaccurate, unfair, and unbalanced news coverage of Israel” after October 7 on behalf of Jewish advocacy group the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA) and HonestReporting Canada, a pro-Israel watchdog group.

In September, a

Radio-Canada journalist was placed on leave

for what CIJA referred to as “antisemitic” comments she made on air. In October, CBC’s president and CEO

Marie-Philippe Bouchard told the Commons Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage

that she condemned the comments made by the journalist — but said the broadcaster didn’t “have to stop everything to do a full investigation” into antisemitism.

The study notes that the CBC has a unique role as a public broadcaster and has “a statutory obligation to provide balanced and impartial coverage of matters of public interest.”

“That responsibility is especially consequential in the context of protracted and highly contested international conflicts, where reporting choices can shape public understanding, influence domestic discourse, and affect social cohesion,” the study says.

Thompson said CBC News was made aware of the study earlier on Monday. It said it was not “involved or consulted prior to its release.”

“Since the Hamas-led attacks of Oct. 7, 2023, CBC News has published thousands of stories on the conflict in Gaza on all of our platforms; the sample examined by the B’nai Brith study includes only a portion of that coverage. We invite the public to review the breadth and depth of our work on this complex and polarizing story,” Thompson said, providing

a link to its coverage.

“As with all its journalism, CBC’s coverage of the conflict in Gaza is bound by our rigorous Journalistic Standards and Practices (JSP), the foundational principles of which are fairness, accuracy, balance, integrity and impartiality.”

Thompson said CBC News is “accountable to the independent CBC Ombud.” Since the start of the conflict, he said that the Ombud has conducted formal reviews of audience complaints of their reporting, but none have found its coverage “violated our journalistic standards of impartiality.”

The study does not intend to single out any journalists, B’nai Brith says, but is meant to indicate that there are “structural pressures that shape coverage in predictable ways,” such as “heavy reliance on international humanitarian organizations, foregrounding of humanitarian impact without equivalent causal context, asymmetrical emotional language, and selective omission of initiating actions are all practices that fall well within standard journalistic norms.”

Researchers also found that, on average, there was a negative tone toward Israel and the Jewish community.

“Fair and balanced reporting matters because the way this conflict is covered shapes how people understand it and how they respond,” writer and pro-Israel advocate

Aviva Klompas

told National Post.

“For Canadians, this matters because distorted reporting hardens views, deepens polarization, and undermines trust in media and public institutions. It also creates a climate in which Jews are blamed for events thousands of miles away, based on false or incomplete information.”

She added: “When coverage crosses from reporting into pushing a narrative, it puts real people at risk.”

The study recommends that CBC have periodic, internal structural reviews of conflict-related coverage. It says that its editorial standards should have clearer internal guidance regarding contextual completeness and sourcing practices, and that it should increase institutional awareness of how narrative framing and emotional emphasis accumulate across coverage as a whole.

Researchers acknowledged the study’s limitations, included its scope and timeline, and that it did not assess Radio-Canada, CBC’s French-language counterpart. The 299 items were coded across four independently defined dimensions of structural bias: framing, selection of contextual information, presentation and language, and sourcing. “Each dimension was coded using explicit thresholds and a binary scoring system,” the study says.

“These findings do not suggest factual inaccuracy, unethical conduct or deliberate advocacy by CBC journalists,” researchers said. “They point instead to recurring structural patterns that, in aggregate, produce a skewed interpretive environment.”

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


This photograph taken on Jan. 13, 2025, in Toulouse shows screens displaying the logo of Grok, a generative artificial intelligence chatbot developed by xAI, and it's founder Elon Musk.

The U.K. is considering a ban on the social media platform X and is trying to gather international support for such a move. But Canada has said it won’t be part of that, at least for now. Here’s what to know.

Why is Britain upset at X?

It isn’t just Britain, but that country have been making news over discussions to ban the platform. At issue is X’s AI assistant, Grok, which has been widely used to generate sexualized deepfakes of women and children, including modifying photographs to remove a person’s clothing.

What has X done to deal with the problem?

The company, run by Elon Musk, said the issue was due to a lapse in its AI’s safeguards. It subsequently limited image generation to

paying customers

. But politicians in Britain and the EU called for a stronger regulatory crackdown.

What are other countries doing?

Some have gone so far as to block their citizens from accessing Grok. On Monday,

Britain’s Guardian newspaper

reported that Malaysia had become the second country to temporarily block access to Grok. This came a day after Indonesia made a similar move.

The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) said on Sunday it would restrict access to Grok over the AI tool’s ability “to generate obscene, sexually explicit, indecent, grossly offensive, and nonconsensual manipulated images, including content involving women and minors,” per the Guardian.

The Guardian also reported that Germany’s culture and media minister had called on the European Commission to take legal steps, warning of the “industrialization of sexual harassment,” and that France and Italy were also warning of the platform’s misuse.

What is Britain’s plan?

On Monday, the U.K.’s independent media regulator Ofcom said it was launching a formal investigation into X over Grok’s image creation feature.

Ofcom described the reports as “deeply concerning,” saying in a statement that the undressed images of people “may amount to intimate image abuse or pornography — and sexualiszed images of children… may amount to child sexual abuse material.”

The office of U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer welcomed the investigation and said Ofcom “has our full support to take any action it sees fit.”

A Downing Street spokesperson added, per an Agence France-Presse news story: “We won’t hesitate to go further to protect children online and strengthen the law as needed.”

Britain’s Online Safety Act says social media and video-sharing platforms hosting potentially harmful content are required to implement strict age verification and are not allowed to create or share non-consensual intimate images, or child sexual abuse material, including sexual deepfakes created with AI. Ofcom has the power to impose fines of 10 per cent of worldwide revenue for breaches of these rules.

What has been Canada’s reaction?

Last week, Starmer was said to be in talks with officials in Canada and Australia about mounting a combined response.

The initial response seemed strong when, several days ago, A.I. Minister Evan Solomon posted to X: “Deepfake sexual abuse is violence. We must protect Canadians, especially women and young people, from exploitation.”

However, in the early hours of Sunday morning, he followed up that message to clarify: “Contrary to media reports, Canada is not considering a ban of X.”

What was Elon Musk’s reaction?

According to the

New York Times

, Musk’s reaction to Britain’s call for a ban was to label the U.K. government as “fascist,” while also boasting that the controversy had led to more downloads of the app.

However, when games developer Tim Sweeney posted to X on Canada’s decision not to ban the platform, Musk responded briefly with just two emojis: c Canadian flag and a heart.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


A B.C. judge has ruled a woman charged with reckless firearm discharge who says Jesus will represent her in court is mentally fit for trial.

A B.C. judge has decided that a woman who believes Jesus Christ will help her fight allegations of recklessly discharging a gun is mentally fit to stand trial.

According to a recently published

provincial court decision

, Crown counsel, on the expert advice of forensic psychiatrist Dr. Garen Gharakhanian, had applied to have Denise Angela Norris declared unfit “based on her diagnosis of unspecified psychosis with religious delusions,” an assessment not contested by her court-appointed lawyer.

The Crown argued that because Norris does not recognize the court’s authority, she “will not actively engage in the court process and will not participate in her defence because, in her view, there is no point,” judge Kristen Mundstock wrote.

In opposing the application, defence counsel insisted Norris was aware of the proceedings, but she ultimately believed “her spiritual fate will be decided by God.”

The Crown submitted reports from five of the meetings between the “deeply religious or spiritual” Norris and Gharakhanian, snippets of which were included in Mundstock’s decision.

During their earliest encounter, Norris acknowledged the existence of courts, judges and prosecutors, but could not explain the charges against her, which she dismissed as “man-made.”

“She said Jesus was her defence lawyer, he will be present at her hearing and she will take instructions from him,” Gharakhanian explained, adding that she communicates with the son of God “mentally and through prayers, while Jesus communicated to her two or three times per day by speaking to her.

“She said she could hear Jesus with her ears and has had visions of him,” he wrote.

As the weeks progressed, these beliefs remained unchanged. Norris insisted she would represent herself in court, with Jesus speaking through her and that the final decision will be made by God.

The psychiatrist said Norris “denied auditory or visual hallucinations”, but said she insisted that “Jesus does speak to her and she was married to God.”

“She then started talking about her relationship to God and Jesus Christ and claimed she had seen Jesus Christ and the devil.”

Norris, who refused to attend court by video because she said it was akin to “playing video games with her life,” also repeatedly stated that provincial law did not apply to her and that the RCMP lacked the authority “to enter her residence, even if she was destroying property.”

In his final report, Gharakhanian said Norris continued to express this belief — distinguishing between B.C. and God’s jurisdiction — and maintain her innocence.

“She said she did not shoot at police and if she were to shoot at them she would have hit them,” the judge wrote. “She also stated the police shot at her and stated the police shot her in the chest to kill her.”

Even with a clear mental disorder, in Mundstock’s view, Norris’s understanding of the legal process and their seriousness indicate she’s able to conduct a defence or instruct her lawyer to do so.

The judge emphasized that fitness does not depend on whether an accused makes good decisions, only whether they are capable of making and communicating decisions. Unlike other cases where delusions caused persons to believe everyone involved the legal process was colluding against them, Norris didn’t appear to have any “persecutory beliefs.”

“Norris’s belief system may interfere with her ability to make the best decisions in conducting her defence, but that is not the standard upon which fitness is measured,” they concluded. “Ms. Norris is entitled to make poor decisions if she chooses.”

The decision does not provide any details on the nature of the Crown’s case against Norris, but it does provide a date and a geographic location for her alleged reckless discharge of a firearm as June 19, 2025, in or near Agassiz, just northeast of Chilliwack. She also referenced shooting and being shot by police during her interviews with Gharakhanian.

All of that aligns with an

incident reported by the Agassiz RCMP

, which is now the subject of investigation by the

Independent Investigations Office of B.C.

, the province’s police oversight entity.

According to the Mounties, officers were called to a residential disturbance that evening, where they found a person with a handgun who “reportedly pointed the gun at police before going into the home.”

Police allege the person returned, pointed the gun outside and fired a shot, resulting in officers returning fire and striking the person before they reentered the home.

The IIO report indicates the accused was air-lifted to the hospital.

According to the court decision, when first taken into custody, Norris refused to take anti-psychotic medication and had to be restrained to be injected. She eventually agreed to accept oral medication, despite denying the need for it.

Norris, who remains in custody, also initially refused to eat, stating that “the eternal body will be with God, the body left behind will decompose.” She eventually started eating again.

The B.C. Prosecution Service told National Post in an email that she is set to appear in court on Monday.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


Arsalan Chaudhary was arrested at Pearson Airport in Toronto.

One of the fugitives wanted for the high-profile $20-million Toronto airport gold heist was arrested Monday at the same airport from where the gold was stolen in 2023, after flying from Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

Arsalan Chaudhary, a 43-year-old man formerly of Mississauga but now listed by police as having no fixed address, was one of three fugitives after Peel Regional Police identified 10 people allegedly participating in what investigators called the largest gold heist in Canadian history.

Chaudhary’s lawyer contacted a Crown attorney in mid-December saying their client was planning to return to Canada on Monday’s date, police said.
“Chaudhary was aware that there was an outstanding Canada-wide warrant for his arrest, and he knew that upon his return, he would be arrested,” Det.-Sgt. Mike Mavity, major case manager for the gold heist case, told National Post.

In the Toronto Pearson gold heist a shipping container filled with the equivalent of 6,600 bars of almost pure gold, weighing 400.19 kilograms, was stolen from an Air Canada cargo facility shortly after arriving on an Air Canada flight to Toronto from Zurich, Switzerland, on April 17, 2023.

The valuable shipping container was fraudulently picked up at the warehouse by a truck driver using an old Air Canada waybill within hours of it arriving from Switzerland.

The gold was valued at the time at more than $20 million. The shipping container also contained foreign currency worth about $2.5 million. The contents were being delivered by Brink’s on behalf of two clients.

Police have recovered only about 

$90,000 worth of that gold, that had been melted

and fashioned into crude bracelets in a Toronto-area jewellery store, police said. Investigators also found $430,000 in Canadian currency, believed to be some of the profit from the sale of the gold.

There is no new information on the gold or the proceeds from it,

Mavity said.

Chaudhary is charged with theft over $5,000, two counts of possession of property obtained by crime, and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence.

He attended the Ontario Court of Justice in Brampton and was held for a bail hearing.

In

video by Postmedia’s Joe Warmington

, Chaudhary — with his hands handcuffed behind his back — is led by two Peel police officers through the airport’s international arrivals section. He is wearing a grey hoodie under a grey ski vest with his head down.

He did not comment or answer questions on his return to Canada before he was placed in a waiting police cruiser.

Two people remain outstanding in the probe, which involved Peel police’s collaboration with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Simran Preet Panesar, 33, from Brampton, is believed to be in India. He quit his job as a manager at the cargo warehouse where the gold was taken a few months after the heist and disappeared. He is wanted for theft over $5,000 and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence. An extradition request has been submitted.

Prasath Paramalingam, 36, from Brampton, was arrested in the original sweep but later disappeared after his release. He is the subject of a judge’s bench warrant for arrest after failing to appear in court on Aug. 19, 2024. Paramalingam is also wanted in the United States in a related gunrunning case.

Police say some of the proceeds from the stolen gold were used to buy black-market guns in the United States to smuggle into Canada. The alleged driver in the gold heist,

Durante King-Mclean, 27, also from Brampton,

was arrested afterwards in Pennsylvania

driving a car stuffed with handguns

en route to Canada, U.S. authorities said.

King-Mclean recently pleaded guilty to firearms trafficking-related charges in the United States and a new warrant for his arrest in Canada has been issued for charges of theft over $5,000 and possession of property obtained by crime.

King-Mclean is expected to be sentenced later this year. Peel investigators remain in contact with him and his legal counsel, police said.

A former fugitive in the case, Archit Grover, also from Brampton,

was arrested in 2024

, also after a Monday flight to Pearson airport, after he stepped off a plane arriving from India. He was charged with theft over $5,000 and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence.

Peel’s chief of police Nishan Duraiappah praised the update in what investigators codenamed Project 24K.

“This investigation demonstrates the dedication and expertise of Peel Regional Police in tackling complex, high-stakes crime,” Duraiappah said in a news release.

“Let it be known: no matter where you try to run or hide, we will find you.”

• Email: ahumphreys@postmedia.com | Twitter:

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our newsletters here.


An Air Canada flight prepares to land at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, Tuesday July 9, 2025.

An Air Canada crew member was trapped in the cargo hold of a flight that was scheduled to take off from Toronto’s Pearson Airport last month, the airline said.

Flight

AC1502

was expected to go from Toronto to Moncton, N.B. on Dec. 13, but it never made it to its destination. A member of the ground crew became stuck in the cargo hold when the doors “inadvertently closed” while he was inside, the airline said in a statement to National Post.

“Upon discovery, the aircraft returned to the gate,” the statement said. “There were no injuries, but as this presented a potential safety issue, we have reinforced our procedures with our ground crews.”

A French Canadian travel blogger and realtor Stephanie Curé posted about the incident

on Instagram

. In the video, a voice can be heard speaking to passengers. Curé started filming as the announcement was being made.

“I’ve never had that in my life,” the voice says, explaining the situation. “First time, hopefully the first and last. But that’s the reason we had to taxi — get that person out of the airplane. The good news is that the person is perfectly fine and safe.”

He added that there was some paperwork to deal with before taking off. However, the flight was later cancelled, according to airline tracking site FlightAware,

CTV News reported

.

“They never did get us to Moncton that day,” wrote Curé, in the caption of the post.

“We had already started taxiing when a baggage crew member was under the aircraft in the cargo and could be heard yelling for help and banging underneath us. Thankfully, he got out safely. I still can’t believe this happened.”

Another passenger, Gabrielle Caron,

told CBC

that passengers sitting at the back of the plane heard “screaming and banging, trying to get their attention.” Someone on the flight “even said that they called 911.”

“We’re noticing the flight attendants are kind of running back and forth in the airplane,” said Caron, “and on the ground, we could see the crew gathering around the plane, so we knew something was happening.”

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


A new survey from Angus Reid finds 62 per cent of Canadians believe crime is increasing.

Canadians are increasingly concerned about rising crime in their communities, according to a new Angus Reid Institute poll.

“New data from

Angus Reid

,” says Shachi Kurl, president of the institute, “shows that three-in-five (62 per cent) Canadians believe crime has been rising in their communities over the last five years. That’s a lot more than the number of Canadians who say there’s been no change (24 per cent) or a decrease (five per cent).”

The new perception is matched by empirical data from Statistics Canada, which shows a rise in both its Crime Severity Index and Violent Crime Severity Index since 2020.

One key metric reveals growing discomfort: In 2015, Angus Reid asked Canadians if they felt safe walking alone after dark in their neighbourhood, finding one-in-three strongly agreed they felt safe and half agreed. This question was put forward again in 2022 and 2025. The proportion who felt safe had dropped from 32 per cent in 2015 to 23 per cent in 2022, and 17 per cent in 2025.

In 2014, Canadians were more likely to perceive stable crime rates (40 per cent) than increasing ones (30 per cent).

The perception that crime is rising close to home tends to be strongest among Conservatives, according to Angus Reid’s data. Those who voted CPC in 2025 believe there has been an increase in crime in their community at a rate 30 points higher than those who voted for Mark Carney’s Liberals (51 per cent). A majority (58 per cent) of past Bloc voters agree crime is increasing. Few Canadians (five per cent) say that crime has been decreasing where they live.

Many minor crimes have been on a downward trajectory in recent years, but one key offence has bucked this trend: shoplifting.

Shoplifting incidents are at their highest mark in decades. After a drop during the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak, each subsequent year has featured more shoplifting. “Increased financial pressures, mental health and addiction issues, lower police staffing levels, and other aspects are credited for this, as well as a focus on theft among organized crime,” says Kurl.

 After a drop during the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak, each subsequent year has featured more shoplifting.

“Report after report during the past few years have noted the increase in shoplifting and abuse faced by the business community.”

Asked about their current job and the past six months, two-in-five (40 per cent) have dealt with shoplifting incidents “many times,” while one-quarter (24 per cent) say it has happened once or twice. Four-in-five have faced verbal abuse, while 43 per cent have endured physical threats.

Among the most widespread crimes, or at least attempted crimes, are fraud and identity theft. More than four-in-five Canadians say they have been the target of an online or phone scam over the past two years. For 30 per cent of the population, this has resulted in the loss of information or money.

Notably, according to the Angus Reid data, Canadians lost more than $638 million in reported fraud cases in 2024, although only five to 10 per cent of such cases are thought to be reported to authorities. This means that while 13 per cent of Canadians have been involved in a police-reported crime during this two-year period, more than one-in-three (36 per cent) have been victims of a crime if expanded to include this rampant fraud.

The prevalence of phishing and fraud attempts is astounding, with more than four-in-five Canadians saying they have been the subject of an attempt over the past two years. Asked if they believe telephone or internet-based fraud and identity theft attempts have been increasing or decreasing in their communities, a majority of Canadians, in each case, say they’re becoming more frequent.

 More than four-in-five Canadians say they have been the subject of a phishing or fraud attempt over the past two years.

While more than 80 per cent have been contacted, 30 per cent say they had money or personal information taken from them by a scam. These proportions tend to be higher with age. People 60 years of age and older are almost twice as likely as 18- to 29-year-olds to have been a victim. Some of this may be attributable to unfamiliarity with emerging fraud strategies.

Across income level, there is little variance, according to Angus Reid. “Canadians of all financial backgrounds are targets. Between 27 and 35 per cent within all income ranges say they have been victimized by fraud of this sort.”

Kurl says that the proportion of Canadians choosing crime and public safety as a top issue in Angus Reid Institute’s quarterly tracking has crept upward over the past eight years. After sitting in single digits from 2014 to 2019, the COVID and post-COVID environment has been one of elevated concern, with the proportion choosing this issue among their most important, rising to almost one-in-five

She notes that according to Statistics Canada, police-reported crimes have risen since 2014, after decades of falling. Though these rates are well below the high point recorded in 1990.

The rate of police-reported violent crime in the U.S. was 334 incidents per 100,000 in 2023, which remains significantly higher than the rate in Canada — 252. However, the gap between the U.S. and Canada has shrunk over the past 25 years.

Crime trends in both countries have fluctuated in recent years, but Canadians are much more likely to perceive crime as rising, while Americans are still far more likely to say that crime is increasing (39 per cent) than decreasing (10 per cent) in their community, though many (37 per cent) say there has been no change.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


Eight people were arrested, three for allegedly assaulting police officers, during a protest and counter-protest outside Toronto city hall.

Eight people were arrested and 29 charges were laid following an explosive demonstration and counter-demonstration in downtown Toronto on Saturday afternoon, including three arrests for allegedly assaulting police officers.

In

a Sunday news release

, the Toronto Police Service said officers were called to Nathan Phillips Square, near Queen Street West and Bay Street, after tensions escalated between opposing groups. While not identified by TPS, a large group of counter-protesters showed up to a Canada First “Stop Mass Immigration Rally” being held in the area on Saturday.

Police said they attempted to maintain order, but participants became disruptive, engaged in physical confrontations with each other and, in some cases, with officers.

The Toronto Police Association condemned the behaviour of some participants, calling it “completely unacceptable and disgusting.

“While trying to keep the situation safe for everyone, our members were pelted with eggs, used toilet paper, and plastic bags filled with what appeared to be urine. One police officer was punched,” it wrote in

a statement on X

, noting none sustained serious injuries.

“Our members will always facilitate peaceful and lawful demonstrations but this violence cannot and will not be tolerated. We are so proud of our members and we will continue to support them.”

In his

statement on X,

Chief Myron Demkiw also denounced all participants’ actions as “unacceptable — full stop” and offered thanks to the responding officers, who “deserve to do their jobs without being attacked.”

“As we have said many times, when officers have the lawful grounds to do so, arrests will be made and charges laid — anywhere in the city, whether involving protesters or counter-protesters.”

Three of the accused — a 25-year-old from Milton, along with a 35-year-old and a 27-year-old from Toronto — face charges including assaulting a police officers. Two of them are also charged with throwing an explosive with intent to cause bodily harm, carrying concealed weapons, and participating in an unlawful assembly while masked.

A 35-year-old Toronto resident was charged with theft, mischief and participating in an unlawful assembly. A 31-year-old from Toronto and a 23-year-old from Ottawa were both charged with obstructing a peace officer and disguising themselves with intent. A 50-year-old Toronto resident was also charged with obstruction and unlawful assembly.

A 24-year-old from Toronto faces charges of assault and participating in an unlawful assembly.

Police said a ninth person was initially arrested by later released unconditionally after further investigation.

All the accused are scheduled to appear in court on the morning of Feb. 26, 2026.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


NDP leadership candidate Heather McPherson takes part in a media scrum following the NDP French language leadership debate, in Montreal on Thursday, Nov. 27, 2025.

A petition pushing for investigations into and even charges against Canadians who served in Israel’s military is an “antisemitic witch hunt,” says a Jewish advocacy group.

The Jan. 7 

petition

, sponsored by Alberta MP Heather McPherson and directed at the Minister of Justice, alleges that there is “credible evidence of serious violations of international law by the IDF in the Middle East” that suggests the involvement of Canadian citizens or residents. McPherson is also an NDP leadership candidate.

The petition calls upon the Canadian government to “direct the Canada Border Services Agency to screen Canadian citizens/residents returning from Israel for foreign military service,” to issue “warnings that Canadians serving/volunteering with the IDF may face criminal liability under Canadian law” and to create a website “to collect information from Gaza/West Bank war crime victims/witnesses.”

The petition “unduly singles out Jewish and Zionist Canadians, by making unfounded accusations against them” and “problematically insinuates that service in the IDF necessitates a degree of culpability,”  B’nai Brith Canada’s CEO Simon Wolle told National Post.

Wolle pointed out that the RCMP already launched a structural investigation into the Israel-Hamas conflict. In a

news release from June 2025

, the RCMP said it had not identified anyone who committed “core international crimes,” and thus had not initiated a criminal investigation into any Canadian.

“Canadian IDF veterans are no different than any other foreign veterans who have made Canada their home,” said Wolle.

“Malicious attempts to prosecute them contribute to an environment where Jewish and Zionist Canadians are increasingly persecuted for their beliefs. This petition should be denounced by MPs for what it is, a baseless attempt to incite against and ostracize Canadians who support the existence of a Jewish nation state.”

McPherson did not respond to National Post’s request for comment.

In November, she released

a statement

saying she was concerned about IDF soldiers visiting Canadian universities and condemned them for “platforming” the soldiers. The statement came the same week that

five people were arrested at an anti-Israel protest

at an off-campus event hosted by Jewish students from Toronto Metropolitan University.

McPherson said she would be raising her “concerns with the Canadian government that IDF soldiers are freely touring Canadian universities while the genocide continues.”

Shai DeLuca is a Canadian-Israel who served in the IDF from 1995 to 1998. “Let me be absolutely clear: this does not make me ashamed of who I am or what I did. It does the opposite. It makes me more all the more proud,” the 48-year-old told National Post. He is a designer and on-air expert on Canadian lifestyle television program, The Morning Show.

No individual in Alberta, no province in Canada, and no foreign political movement gets to lecture Jews or Israelis about our service or our right to self-defense,” he said.

He referred to his service as “one of the proudest accomplishments” of his life.

“The IDF is not a militia, not a rogue group…It is Israel’s lawful military, recognized as such under international law,” he said.

“History teaches us to be very clear-eyed about what happens when people begin compiling lists of Jews based on identity, association, or service. We have seen this before, including in Canada and it has never been about justice. It has always been about targeting.”

In February 2025, National Post reported on a publication that created

a list of Canadian Jews

who served in the IDF. DeLuca was one of the then-85 Canadians included. National Post reported last month that the same publication went on to create

a database of Jewish institutions

“associated” with the IDF, including summer camps, schools and synagogues.

“We will not be intimidated into silence, and we will not disavow our own legitimacy to satisfy those who deny it,” said DeLuca, about McPherson’s petition.

The CEO of Jewish advocacy group Tafsik, Amir Epstein, said that the petition is a “transparent attempt to appease radical ideologues by targeting law-abiding Canadian citizens.”

“It is telling that the MP expresses no concern over the presence of ISIS or

Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-affiliated individuals in Canada, yet seeks to criminalize young Canadians who stepped up to rescue hostages and combat terrorism,” he said.

He said the Tafsik Organization views it as “shameful harassment of the Jewish community.” He added that Tafsik would offer its legal service pro bono to “any lone soldier targeted by these baseless and discriminatory efforts.”

“We trust that the moral integrity of the Canadian people will ultimately reject this divisive rhetoric,” he said.

Meanwhile, Richard Marceau, the senior vice president for strategic initiatives and general counsel for CIJA, told National Post that McPherson should “focus on issues that matter to Canadians, not on rhetoric that demonizes Jewish Canadians.”

“Basely attacking members of the Jewish community who have honourably served the Jewish people and a democratic ally of Canada, in an effort to pander to extremists, is reprehensible,” said Marceau.

“At a time of rising hate and violence, as we have

recently seen in Australia

, placing a target on the backs of Canadian citizens is dangerous. We call on Ms. McPherson to end this demonization before tragedy strikes.”

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.


Iranian-born Goldie Ghamari, who was just a year old when her family fled for Canada in 1986 – seven years after another revolution deposed the Shah of Iran. The former Ontario Progressive Conservative MPP, now hosts a daily podcast with 800,000 followers. She is a supporter of Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the former Shah.

Millions of Iranian citizens have taken to the streets since Dec. 28 in an unprecedented, widespread revolt against the Islamic Republic’s regime.
Watching events closely from Canada is Iranian-born Goldie Ghamari, who was just a year old when her family fled for Canada in 1986 – seven years after another revolution deposed the Shah of Iran and installed Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
The former Ontario Progressive Conservative MPP — she was removed from caucus by Premier Doug Ford in 2024 for what he described as “serious lapses of judgment” and did not run again — now hosts a daily podcast and livestream, The Goldie Show, with 800,000 followers across several platforms.
She is an explicit supporter of Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of the former Shah who has encouraged the protests and hopes to return to Iran.
Ghamari has appeared on Glenn Beck’s show, as well as with Piers Morgan, Erin Molan and other broadcasters. Senator Ted Cruz and author J.K. Rowling have retweeted her messages.
Estimates vary, but dozens of protesters have been killed and more than 2,200 arrested. Authorities in Iran have imposed an internet blackout.
Dave Gordon interviewed Ghamari on Friday for National Post.
Can you describe the scenes on the ground, in the videos that you’ve been able to acquire?
 
There are things that I have never seen in the last four decades. The bravery of the Iranian people is incredibly inspiring. However, at the same time, we’re also seeing footage of Iranians being slaughtered by the Islamic Republic. So, it’s very emotional.
We know that the Islamic Republic is incredibly vicious. They’ve been oppressing us for the last 47 years. And so we knew that the closer it gets to the end, the more vicious and more brutal the Islamic Republic is going to be. Despite all of this, Iranians are more determined than ever to overthrow the Islamic Republic. It’s literally now or never. It’s life or death. So we are right now in the middle of the Iranian revolution, and the fight is not over yet. We still have a long way to go, but Iranians are mobilized. They’re determined.
We’re seeing millions of Iranians out in the streets chanting “Death to the dictator, Death to the Islamic Republic.” They’re also chanting, “this is the final battle. Pahlavi will return.” Pahlavi, of course, is his royal highness, the crown prince of Iran. And the reason that they’re calling for Pahlavi to return is because Pahlavi is the only person that Iranians trust to transition them from a totalitarian Islamic dictatorship into a functioning secular, democratic society.
At the same time, we’re also seeing horrific footage of Islamic regime terrorists who are literally just opening fire, shooting into crowds of unarmed Iranians. But, we’re also seeing videos of Iranians who are fighting back. Some of them are using homemade Molotov cocktails. I don’t condone violence, but when you have a population that’s unarmed and being brutally murdered, this is how Iranians are fighting back. At this point, Iranians have nothing left to lose, and these are the true freedom fighters of the 21st century.
How are these protests different from anything prior?
We’ve never seen these numbers in the past. That’s the first thing. The second thing is that for the first time in 47 years, we’ve had a president of the United States who is siding with the Iranian people. This has never happened before in past protests. Obama, for example, in 2009 when he had the opportunity to stand with the Iranian people, he instead chose to stand with the Islamic terrorists and threw them a lifeline, and then he sent planes full of cash to the Islamic Republic.
President Trump, however, with his statement where he says that he’s standing with the Iranian people, we’ve never seen anything like that. That has encouraged Iranians to go out and demonstrate even more and to fight for their rights, because now they know that the leader of the free world is standing on their side.
What do you think it’ll take for the regime to fall?
No totalitarian dictatorship has ever fallen by just people going out. Totalitarian dictatorships have always fallen when there has been a military coup d’etat. On top of that, no revolution has ever been successful without outside interference.
We need to see, I would say, some sort of assistance from the United States. What President Trump has said so far has been really helpful, but Iranians right now are being slaughtered, and President Trump promised Iranians if the slaughtering continues, then America will respond, and that America is locked and loaded.
The other aspect is military defection. So we’re already starting to see military defections continuing, and so that just needs to continue.
How has Israel affected what’s going on in Iran now?
 
The only reason that Iranians are now able to have a fighting chance against the Islamic dictatorship is because of what Israel did back in the summer during the 12-day conflict (in a joint effort with the U.S. bombing military installations and nuclear factories). They severely weakened the Islamic regime. And so it’s a large reason for why Iranians have been so successful right now, and are continuing to fight back.
 
How much of the protest has to do with the economy?
The protests were sparked by the failing economy. That is true. On Sunday, Dec. 28, it was the collapse of the rial that sparked the merchants in Tehran to go on strike. However, within two hours that spread like wildfire, not just around Tehran, but it spread around the country. The collapsing economy is the straw that broke the camel’s back.
It’s about the complete and total oppression of Iranians for the last 47 years. It’s about the fact that Iranians don’t want sharia law. It’s about the fact that there’s no water, there’s no electricity. It’s about the fact that people are just done with this Islamic dictatorship.
Why do you believe this is a point of no return?
 
Because the Islamic Republic has never been weaker, and Iranians are also putting their names and faces out there. That in itself is treason. The reason they say it’s now or never, is because the situation is so bad and they have put everything on the line.
We are never going to have another opportunity like this to free Iran, where, you know, all the stars seem to have aligned.
Thanks to Israel, thanks to the president of the United States, who is standing on the side of the people.
If they don’t win, it’s pretty much game over. Iranians have also never been more determined, so that their determination is something that is just incredibly inspiring.
What can you say about what countries, if any, are supporting the regime during these protests?
Maduro was definitely a big ally of the Islamic Republic. However, when President Trump liberated Venezuela from the dictator Maduro, that actually was a huge blow for the Islamic Republic.
Venezuela actually holds billions of dollars of assets from the Islamic regime.
Venezuela has also been a base where the Islamic Republic has built drones, and has military factories and trains Islamic terrorists there.
And, of course, Hezbollah.
So by President Trump going after Venezuela, that has eradicated one of the strongest allies that the Islamic regime had.
Russia still, however, maintains as a player, but, what’s interesting is that no country has actually come out in support of the Islamic Republic, not even Russia or China. Everyone’s remaining silent because, again, like the allyship of these rogue states, it’s very tenuous. You know, there’s no honour amongst thieves.
There is a rumour circulating that Khamenei has a plan of escape now, to go to Russia.
It’s more just, you know, a place that terrorists might be able to escape to, similar to how Bashar Al Assad escaped Syria and went to Russia.
What would you like the Canadians, and the Government of Canada, to say or do in response to the protests?
 
I would say the best thing that Canadians can do right now is to keep all eyes on Iran and to, you know, pressure Mark Carney to speak out, and support the Iranian people.
The Iranian national revolution is anti-Islam, anti-Islamic, anti sharia law. It’s pro-revolution, pro-shah.
-This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.