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Candidate for mayor, Rahim Jaffer unveils his plan to

OTTAWA — Former four-term MP Rahim Jaffer says he’s thinking about running for the Edmonton area seat currently held by departing Conservative Matt Jeneroux.

Jaffer told National Post that he saw the stars aligning for a possible comeback when

Jeneroux announced last month

he’d be resigning from Parliament, noting the news eerily dovetailed with a development in his personal life.

“My mom lives (in Jeneroux’s riding) and … a few weeks earlier, she’d approached me and said, oh, I want to downsize, why don’t you take over this house now?” said Jaffer. “It’s kind of funny, the timing.”

Jaffer says he’s been approached by a few different people about running for the soon-to-be-vacated seat and will take some time over the holidays to mull over a return to federal politics.

He said he’ll stand as a Conservative if he chooses to run and supports party leader Pierre Poilievre.

“(Poilievre) did not bad in the last campaign. There’s more reasons to try to continue to try to build around him than throw him out and start from scratch,” said Jaffer.

Jaffer said he liked Poilievre’s focus on common sense criminal justice measures targeting property crimes like auto thefts and home break-ins, noting that crime is a top concern across Edmonton..

He said he’s not currently a member of the Conservative party and hasn’t decided if he’ll be attending the party’s national convention in Calgary next month.

“You know, I hadn’t thought about (going to the Calgary convention) but one of the local riding association vice presidents recently told me, you gotta come, you gotta go get your membership up to date. So there’s still a window, I guess to do that,” said Jaffer.

First elected as a Reform MP in 1997, Jaffer spent 11 years representing a nearby Edmonton riding before losing a tight October 2008 race to NDP candidate Linda Duncan. He was appointed chair of the Conservative caucus in early 2006, serving until his departure from Parliament.

He was back in the headlines less than a year after his defeat, when a

late-night impaired driving arrest

raised questions about his post-government lobbying activities and business ties.

The 2009 DUI wasn’t Jaffer’s first brush with controversy. In 2001, he was caught sending an aide to impersonate him during a radio interview he was unable to attend, a stunt that got him

demoted from his committee duties

.

Jaffer returned to politics earlier this year to run for mayor of Edmonton,

finishing in fifth place

with just over four per cent of the vote.

Jeneroux has not said precisely when he will be leaving office and a byelection has not yet been scheduled.

National Post

rmohamed@postmedia.com

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.


Former Canada Pension Plan Investment Board CEO Mark Wiseman speaks during an interview in Toronto, Ontario, Tuesday, January 27, 2015.

OTTAWA — The Parti Québécois is calling on the federal government to “remove” financier Mark Wiseman’s name from their list of potential Canadian ambassadors to the United States, arguing that he is “not a friend” to Quebec.

Prime Minister Mark Carney has said that he would be announcing his new pick to replace longtime ambassador Kirsten Hillman within days. For now, the person rumoured to take her place is Wiseman, a close friend of Carney’s and longtime business executive.

On Thursday, PQ member of the National Assembly Pascal Paradis said his nomination would be “unacceptable” for Quebec.

“The Parti Québécois will never accept the nomination of Mark Wiseman as Canada’s ambassador to the U.S. Why? Because Mark Wiseman is not a friend of the Quebec nation,” Paradis said in a press conference in Quebec City.

Wiseman is known as the co-founder of the Century Initiative, a controversial lobbying group which advocates for increasing Canada’s population to 100 million by 2100.

In 2023, he retweeted a Globe and Mail column calling for that dramatic increase in immigration levels to become federal policy “even if it makes Quebec howl.”

Even though those words were not his own but rather those of the title written by columnist Andrew Coyne, Paradis said Wiseman’s publication on X is reminiscent of an infamous quote from former prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, comparing Quebecers to dogs.

In 1885, Macdonald was purported to have said of Métis leader Louis Riel, who was seen as a folk hero and a martyr in Quebec because of his defence of the French language and his Catholic faith: “He shall hang though every dog in Quebec bark in his favour.”

Days after Riel’s execution,

as described by historian Robert N. Wilkins in the Montreal Gazette

, 50,000 people protested in the streets of Montreal and the Conservatives never fully recovered politically in Quebec until John Diefenbaker swept the province in 1958.

The PQ is adding its voice to a growing list of politicians in Ottawa who criticized Wiseman’s potential nomination this week because of his connection to the Century Initiative, but also because of past skepticism of the supply management system.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said on Wednesday that Wiseman is “someone who has shown contempt for Quebec and who cannot negotiate on behalf of Quebec.”

“Why does the Prime Minister want to appoint him as ambassador to Washington?”

Bloc Québécois House leader Christine Normandin also took issue with the use of the word “howl” which she said is something dogs do.

As for NDP Deputy Leader Alexandre Boulerice, he said to have an ambassador in the U.S. that does not believe in supply management sends a “very, very bad signal” before the start of the review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade agreement next year.

National Post

calevesque@postmedia.com

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Owen Sound courthouse.

An Ontario man kept his wife and four children confined in their home for years through intimidation and fear while cloaking abuse as protection that kept them healthy “in the eyes of the Lord.”

A jury in Owen Sound, Ont.,

found a father guilty

of five counts of unlawful confinement — one count each for his wife and four children — along with sexual assault, threatening death, assault, and other charges.

The man’s family escaped their home with the help of police, and he was arrested the following day.

Court heard the confinement of his wife and one child, who is now an adult, lasted 17 years, while confinement of three younger children extended for their entire lives, ranging from six to 11 years.

The man kept them mostly indoors in homes in Bruce and Huron counties, two predominantly agricultural regions dotted by villages and towns along the shore of Lake Huron, about 200 kilometres west of Toronto.

Publication bans prohibiting identification of the victims mean the man cannot be named.

“Rather than being the loving, inclusive, tolerant father and husband that he attempted to paint himself, he believes he’s smarter than most people,” Assistant Crown Attorney Meredith Gardiner told the jury.

“He knows it all. He’s done it all. He’s been through more than anyone. He has superhuman strength. He is exceptional. And he believes he should be in control of everyone and everything, all the time.”

While the couple were dating, the man told his future wife that because of “rape culture” she couldn’t go outside unless he was with her, the wife testified. While inside the home she had to close the windows and draw the curtains, but he allowed the windows to be opened briefly if the wind was coming from the north.

In her summary of evidence to the jury last week, Ontario Superior Court Judge Gisele Miller said the children were confined to certain parts of a house and couldn’t go outside unless permitted by their father, or they were with him.

The wife testified that at first her husband let her take their children to the park before restrictions tightened and “he really pulled us in … isolating the family visually from the community,” Miller said of the woman’s testimony. The increased restrictions coincided with the birth of another child.

For a few years, his wife and eldest child were permitted to attend one community event a year, “otherwise, they could not go anywhere alone,” Miller said of the wife’s testimony.

When neighbours raised concern about not seeing the family outside, the man permitted his wife to let the children out one at a time, Miller said. He asked for pictures of this, “in case CAS would call,” a reference to child welfare authorities, Miller’s summary of evidence said.

He wouldn’t let the children ride bicycles or play with toys.

“While outside, the children were not permitted to touch the ground,” Miller said. They could go outside once a week for 10 or 15 minutes, but only if the wind was coming from the north.

Two children told court they feared their father would kill them if they disobeyed. The charges include physically assaulting a son by lifting him off the floor by his face.

The wife was asked in cross-examination about opportunities to escape when her husband left them at home to go on vacations on his own, and about their shared ownership of the house and bank account.

She said she was fearful of what he would do if they left or if she used the bank card without his permission. The woman testified she and her children complied with his restrictions because they feared they would be killed if they didn’t.

The man had pleaded not guilty to all charges and denied confining his family.

He was self-represented at his trial that started Oct. 27. The court appointed lawyer Richard Stern to assist the court and the accused.

Stern said the accused characterized his actions as acts of love and protection.

Stern told the jury the father’s position was that “he went to great lengths to protect his family, keep them safe from harm, and keep them healthy and good in the eyes of the Lord.”

Stern said the defendant felt he was shielding them from what he believed were the “evils of secular society” and that videos he made of his family showed his “love and affection” for them.

The accused said the accusations were unfounded accounts by his former wife, calling it a “false, distorted story of cruelty and intimidation when the reality was love.”

The husband argued his wife could have left at any time and “all of this could have been avoided” had his family, police, and child welfare authorities told him they wanted to leave.

He told court he took the family on trips in Ontario and the United States and often reminded his wife to let the children outside. He said he made a deal with his wife and their eldest child that he would pay for everything if they stayed home and kept house, Miller said of his evidence.

The jury was shown video clips of him taking the children out in his car. One video showed one of the children, who was almost seven, seeing a community centre and a park for the first time.

Miller said the man described the videos he supplied as showing “happiness, love, frivolity and togetherness” and their “devotion to Christianity.”

Gardiner, the prosecutor, argued he was not a credible witness, that his testimony was repeatedly contradicted by his words heard on the videos. His actions were not to protect or correct the children, as parents have the right to do, but rather were a result of his “abusive personality.”

“It is the Crown position that (the defendant) ruled his family through intimidation, threats and violence. He controlled every part of their lives,” Miller told the jury. She advised that confinement can be by way of “fear, intimidation and psychological or other means.”

The jury agreed and convicted him on 13 of the 15 charges.

He was also convicted of threatening bodily harm, criminal harassment and intimidation against an Ontario Disability Support Worker who was trying to initiate an investigation that required his eldest child to sign documents.

The jury concluded he was the masked man on a Harley Davidson motorcycle who drove by the worker’s office, waited outside, and followed him to a gas station and then to a diner. The worker testified the man on the motorcycle drove up to him and said “mess with my family and you’ll pay” several times.

The man has not yet been sentenced.

Gardiner said she may make an application for an assessment of the man for a possible dangerous offender designation. That could lead to an indeterminate prison sentence and a long-term supervision order.

Postmedia

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A screen grab taken from video footage provided by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau on December 11, 2025 showing a skydiver left dangling thousands of metres in the air after their parachute caught on the plane's tail. The skydiver survived the incident.

A skydiver in Australia faced some terrifying mid-air moments after his parachute got caught on the plane wing just after he jumped.

He had to cut himself free as the plane continued on its flight path, reports the

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

.

Video of the harrowing few moments, which occurred on Sept. 20, have been released as part of the findings of an Australian Transport Safety Bureau investigation into the incident over Mission Beach in Queensland on September 20.

The plane involved was a Cessna Caravan, hired by the Far North Freefall skydive club. The parachute jump was part of the “Big Ways at the Beach” multi-day event in which experienced parachutists jumped and completed large-group formations.

The ATSB said 17 parachutists were on board the flight to perform a “16-way formation jump” from 4,572 metres.

However, as the first parachutist leapt from the aircraft door, the handle of his reserve parachute snagged on a wing flap. Two skydivers were pulled out of the plane.

The skydiver in question was wearing a camera. Another was mounted on the plane’s wing, resulting in filming the incident from multiple angles.

The video released by Australian Transport Safety Bureau shows the parachute being deployed and the man being dragged from the aircraft. Then the chute becomes snagged on the wing, leaving the man hanging.

Another parachutist fell from the plane as this unfolded.

While hanging from the plane, the skydiver cut himself free with a knife and went into freefall. He released his main parachute, landing safely and sustaining only minor injuries.

As the pilot attempted to maintain a level flight, 13 of the parachutists jumped from the aircraft, while two remained, investigators say.

“The pilot assessed they had limited pitch control, given the substantially damaged tailplane, which still had a portion of the reserve parachute wrapped around it,” ATSB chief commissioner Angus Mitchell said.

Despite the damage, the pilot managed to gradually descend while declaring “MAYDAY” to Brisbane Air Traffic Control.

The investigation found that, while not directly contributing to the incident, the pilot and aircraft operator had not ensured the aircraft was loaded within its “weight and balance envelope.”

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.


Marie Chapman is the CEO and director of the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 in Halifax.

Marie Chapman, director and CEO of the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 in Halifax, has announced that she is stepping away from the role immediately.

The move follows a scathing report released this week by the federal integrity commissioner that called Chapman out over “serious breaches” of both the public sector ethics code and the code of conduct of her own museum.

In an statement shared with National Post, Cynthia Price Verreault, chair of the museum’s board of trustees, said: “The Board is treating this matter with the utmost urgency and focus.  We accept the Commissioner’s findings and are taking action immediately, working in partnership with government.”

She added: “In early December as the Board was gaining a better understanding of the report, (it) confirmed CEO Marie Chapman’s decision to retire, and effective today, she has stepped away from her role.  The Board expresses its appreciation to Ms. Chapman for her more than 22 years of dedicated service to the museum.”

Fiona Valverde, the museum’s vice-president of revenue generation, is assuming responsibility for day-to-day operations until a new CEO can be named.

The case report

from the Office of the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner of Canada, found that Marie Chapman, CEO of the

Canadian Museum of Immigration

at Pier 21 in Halifax, “engaged in a pattern of inappropriate behaviour causing emotional harm to multiple employees over an extended period of time.”

Among the findings of the report by Commissioner Harriet Solloway were that Chapman referred to her Senior Leadership Team (SLT) as “sluts”.

“Notably, Ms. Chapman used this term in public and in the presence of Museum employees,” the report said. “This included an incident in which she informed a delegation from another country that ‘I call them sluts’ and laughed about it. While some witnesses recounted that Ms. Chapman was trying to be funny, the use of such language in the workplace is inappropriate and inconsistent with the standards expected of someone in a leadership position in the federal public sector.”

Additionally, Chapman was said to have made comments that included ranking female employees by age; noting there were “no good-looking men” at the museum; and referring to some employees not by their names but by nicknames based on physical or behavioural traits.

The report also noted that Chapman had said a famous female athlete “looks like a man,” making a disgusted face and suggesting the woman looked too masculine to be featured in a museum product. “Suggesting that a woman does not have the right appearance to be able to be representative of women is offensive, and it is even more problematic coming from a Chief Executive like Ms. Chapman,” the report said.

Additional inappropriate behaviour included “using inappropriate and offensive language, raising her voice and yelling, instilling fear and intimidating employees, and mistreating and targeting some employees.” The report said this behaviour took place “over an extended period of time.”

 The exterior of the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 in Halifax on Thursday, Nov. 20, 2025.

It found that some employees had explored financial options for retirement or departure from the museum. “Others testified about mental health struggles with some reporting that her conduct impacted them so deeply to the point of contemplating self-harm.”

Solloway concluded: “Ms. Chapman’s breach of the (Public Sector) Code was not a one-time lapse in judgment, but a repeated problem that persisted for over a decade. This sort of breach poses a serious threat to public confidence in the integrity of the public sector, and specifically the Museum.”

She added: “I have made one recommendation concerning corrective measures to Ms. Marie Chapman … I recommend that an external expert assess the employees’ wellness at the Museum to determine appropriate support measures.”

The board has said it plans to implement the recommendation, adding: “We welcome opportunities for learning and improvement and are committed to strengthening the organization moving forward.”

Chapman’s own response runs to more than 2,400 words and is included in the report. She took issue with the findings as well as the investigative process.

On the use of the term “sluts,” she noted that it was not directed specifically at her senior leadership team. “This distinction is important because I always considered myself part of the group,” she wrote, adding: “If I had been questioned about my wording, I would have clarified immediately. However, I was never asked.”

The Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 opened on

Canada Day, 1999

, on the national historic site where nearly a million immigrants landed in Canada between 1928 and 1971. In 2011, the government of Stephen Harper appointed Chapman as the

first director and CEO

 of the museum. She was later reappointed by the Trudeau government in 2016, and again in 2021. The

CBC reported

that she earns a salary of up to $221,700.

In 2021,

Mélanie Joly

, then Minister of Canadian Heritage, said: “Thanks to Ms. Chapman’s dedication and leadership, the Museum has had a great deal of success. Visitors have benefited from wonderful exhibitions and enjoyed unforgettable experiences.”

Chapman

received both

the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2012 and the Platinum Jubilee Medal in 2022, in recognition of her contributions to the museum.

In 2018, she was the

subject of a report

by the Office of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner over whether she contravened the Conflict of Interest Act when she offered a contract for a term position that year to an alleged friend, and then appointed her to a permanent position. However, that report found no wrongdoing.

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.


According to a new report from the Joint Economic Committee of Senate Democrats, businesses in U.S. states on the border with Canada are hurting as Canadian tourists stay away due to the political tensions.

Declining Canadian tourism is adversely affecting American businesses in every state along the U.S.-Canada border, according to a n

ew report

by the U.S. Senate Democrats’ Joint Economic Committee.

“In 2024, Canadian tourism contributed $20.5 billion to the U.S. economy and supported 140,000 American jobs,” states

the report

, released on Wednesday. “The negative impacts of President Trump’s tariff policies have been particularly stark in states along the U.S.-Canada border, which have many businesses that rely on short-term visits by Canadians.”

The decline has arisen from President Donald Trump’s

threats to annex Canada

, as well as his imposition of several rounds of tariffs, amid

repeatedly
broken off trade talks

, says the committee in its report.

It reviews the latest drops in Canadian tourism in all border states and includes testimonials from business owners.

“Going back for generations, Canadians have visited New Hampshire and many other states along the U.S.-Canada border to see family or friends, stay in our hotels, share a meal at our restaurants, and shop at our stores,” U.S. Senator Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Ranking Member of the Joint Economic Committee was quoted as saying

in the report

. “However, in the wake of President Trump’s reckless tariffs and needless provocations, fewer and fewer Canadians are making trips to the United States, putting many American businesses in jeopardy and straining the close ties that bind our two nations.”

New Hampshire newspaper,

Concord Monitor

, pointed to that state seeing 30 per cent fewer visitors from Canada last summer “as the Trump administration’s tariffs, border controls and hints about taking over our northern neighbour chilled the two nations’ relationship.”

Elizabeth Guerin, owner of Fiddleheads in Colebrook, N.H. told the committee: “Being only eight miles from the border, normally Canadians make up anywhere from 15-25 percent of visitors. Now, I can probably count the number of Canadian visitors on one hand. I’m just trying to plug along and keep my nose above the waterline.”

From January to October 2025, the Joint Economic Committee found a

decline in the number of passenger vehicles crossing the U.S.-Canada border

of nearly 20 percent compared to the same time period in 2024. Some states experienced declines as large as 27 percent, states the report. That coincides with American businesses in states along the border reporting fewer tourists, more hotel vacancies, and lower sales.

Shirley Hughes, president and CEO of Visit Fargo-Moorhead in Fargo, N.D. and Moorhead, Minnesota is quoted as saying: “These are more than numbers; they represent missed revenue for local businesses, reduced hotel demand, and fewer dollars supporting jobs and investment in our community.”

The drop in visits from Canadian tourists have had a noticeable impact on the bottom line of several businesses. Scott Osborn, president and co-owner of Fox Run Vineyards in Penn Yan, New York says: “With Canadians making up about 10% of our business, fewer cross-border travellers mean fewer tastings, tours, and wine sales — a ripple effect that touches our entire operation, underscoring how important cross-border tourism is to our business model.”

Vermont TV news station

WCAX

noted the report’s inclusion of anecdotes from businesspeople such as Christa Bowdish, owner of the Old Stagecoach Inn in Waterbury, Vermont.

“The damage to the U.S. relationship with Canadian tourists has taken an emotional toll, says Bowdish. “This is long-lasting damage to a relationship and emotional damage takes time to heal. While people aren’t visiting Vermont, they’ll be finding new places to visit, making new memories, building new family traditions, and we will not recapture all of that.”

The report states that Canadian customers have been telling U.S. tourism operators they were hesitant to cross the border due to current political tension.

“The joy of the ‘shopping day trip’ has been replaced by anxiety over border enforcement and tariffs. Additionally, we are situated on the primary corridor for families traveling from Quebec to the Maine coast, and the usual parade of vacationers heading to Old Orchard Beach simply didn’t show up this year,” says said Kyle Daley, owner of Soloman’s Store in West Stewartstown, N.H.

“When our neighbours stay away, our margins disappear and in groceries those margins are vanishingly small to begin with. The friction at the border is no longer just a headline; it is an empty parking lot and a threat to our livelihood. We are all eager to see normality and civility restored in our long productive relationship with our neighbors to the north.”

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Correctional Service Canada defended its policy.

A women’s rights organization is seeking permission from the Federal Court to challenge the government’s policy allowing transgender women to be housed in female prisons, arguing that it puts women at risk of harm.

Last week, the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (JCCF)

filed a motion

for public interest standing on behalf of the group Canadian Women’s Sex-Based Rights (CAWSBAR).

“The motion seeks the court’s recognition that CAWSBAR is the appropriate party to advance a landmark constitutional challenge to the federal government’s practice of placing trans-identifying (biological) male inmates in women’s prisons,” says a press release from JCCF. “The lawsuit seeks to protect incarcerated women who might not feel safe challenging this policy, given the potential for institutional consequences or effects on their parole.”

The motion is to be heard on March 3, 2026.

Granting standing to CAWSBAR would “give a voice to women who have been silenced by fear of reprisal,”

constitutional lawyer Chris Fleury said in a statement

. The motion would allow the case to proceed even if no inmate can safely come forward to lodge a complaint.

The statement of claim, which was filed by CAWSBAR on April 7, challenges Correctional Service Canada’s (CSC) Directive 100: Gender Diverse Offenders. The policy permits biological males who self-identify as women to be placed in female institutions, regardless of whether they have undergone a surgical transition.

CAWSBAR argues that the policy violates several Charter rights, including section 7 (protection for life, liberty and security of the person), section 12 (protection against cruel and unusual treatment) and section 15 (equality rights).

The lawsuit also references section 28, which states that all Charter rights and freedoms are “guaranteed equally to male and female persons.”

In a statement, CSC defended its process for placing inmates in appropriate institutions.

“CSC effectively manages prison populations by ensuring that all offenders, including those with diverse gender identities, are in an environment that meets their security requirements, correctional programs and spiritual and cultural needs, thereby contributing to their safe rehabilitation and reintegration into the community,” CSC said.

“If overriding health or safety concerns are identified and cannot be effectively mitigated, the placement request may be denied. In such cases, alternative measures are implemented to support the person’s gender-related needs where they reside.”

A 2022

study completed by CSC

found that there were 99

“gender diverse offenders” in custody between December 2017 and March 2020. Of them, 61 were transgender women, 21 were trans men and the remaining 17 were classified as “other” (gender fluid, gender non-conforming/non-binary, intersex, two-spirited, or unspecified). The report found that “federal gender diverse offenders” accounted for 0.4 per cent of the general offender population.

According to commentary based on the CSC study that was published by the
Macdonald-Laurier Institute
, there is “
strong empirical evidence that the adoption of self-identification policies by CSC is having a disproportionate impact on the composition of women’s prisons. One trans man was accommodated in one of the 53 federal men’s prisons. Twenty trans women were accommodated in one or more of the six CSC women’s facilities.”

CAWSBAR was established in 2019

, “to preserve the sex-based rights and protections of women and girls across Canada,” the motion states. “CAWSBAR advocates for women’s sex-based rights and protections in the context of prisons, washrooms and changing rooms, sporting competitions, and other venues traditionally reserved for biological females.” National Post columnist Amy Hamm is a member of the steering committee.

Fleury said that housing transgender women in female prisons puts biological women at risk.

“They are just allegations at this moment in speaking,” said Fleury, in an interview. “However with the evidence we anticipate bringing … results range from women being made uncomfortable while dressing and changing to extreme cases of rape and sexual assault.”

Fleury said an organization like CAWSBAR is needed to help female inmates voice their concerns.

“Inmates across the country report the harm they have suffered and what is happening inside but staying in contact with them is nearly impossible,” said Fleury. “Phones are limited, numbers need to be approved by correction officers. I believe CAWSBAR has the capacity to bring this claim, especially with assistance from Charter Advocates Canada.”

The court is not reviewing evidence at this stage, only whether CAWSBAR qualifies for public interest standing, Fleury said.

“This is a serious and justiciable issue and CAWSBAR has a genuine stake,” said Fleury. “We expect substantial evidence to emerge, including inmate testimony, expert reports and government disclosure, but none of it is before the court because the only question right now is standing.”

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Tobacco and cannabis dispensaries, near Highway 102 at Millbrook, N.S. on Thursday June 13, 2024.

Traces of fentanyl have been found in cannabis purchased in some of Nova Scotia’s many unlicensed marijuana dispensaries, the province’s premier said Thursday.

Under fire from First Nations for his government’s directive last week for police to “intensify enforcement aimed at stopping illegal cannabis operations,” many of which are located on reserves, Premier Tim Houston and two of his ministers were even banned by one, Sipekne’katik First Nation, earlier this week. There are rumblings from some of the province’s dozen other Mi’kmaq First Nations about instituting similar bans.

“I’ve talked to people in law enforcement who have told me that in this province that they’ve taken illegal cannabis from unregulated illegal dispensaries and tested it and found that it was laced with traces of fentanyl,” Houston said.

“Sometimes I hear, ‘I don’t buy from the government supply because I don’t get the same buzz.’ Well, that’s probably why.”

Over the years, fentanyl has become the dominant drug on streets across Canada, taking thousands of lives.

Tests have also found “all kinds of pesticides” in black market cannabis, Houston said.

“So, there’s a real public health issue there, and behind it all, in many cases, not all, but in many cases, is organized crime,” he said.

The premier said he’s been “pretty overwhelmed the last few days, to be honest, from the outpouring of support I’ve heard from people in this province that live in First Nations communities and are thankful that somebody is stepping up, because they don’t want this in their communities,” he said.

Houston said he’s heard from parents, “and mothers in particular,” who told him, “My child says: ‘Can we go in the store with the flashing lights and get some candy?’” Houston said.

“They don’t want that.”

Much of the criticism levelled at the Houston government’s directive to police to ramp up efforts against the unlicensed dispensaries focuses on his lack of consultation with First Nations groups.

“Until the end of time, people will be complaining that the government didn’t consult enough, didn’t consult properly, didn’t consult broadly enough,” Houston said.

“I will assure you 100 per cent that we meet and exceed those obligations every single time.”

The premier said those who operate unlicensed cannabis dispensaries — there are an estimated 118 in Nova Scotia — don’t want to lose the revenue they generate.

“The reality is we have people making millions and millions of dollars selling illegal cannabis, and they’re upset to hear that there might be a crackdown on it,” Houston said.

“We also have people who are customers, and some of them think this is an elaborate scheme by the government to get more money from them. It’s not. We’re concerned about the public safety.”

The government has “massive concerns, as do many, many community members across this province, and many many Nova Scotians, about the organized crime element,” Houston said.

“Where does everybody think the money’s going?”

He linked human trafficking to the illegal cannabis issue, but didn’t elaborate.

“We are the voice for the people who are afraid to stand up,” Houston said.

The province has 51 legal Nova Scotia Liquor Corp. (NSLC) outlets that sell cannabis.

“We’re just saying, hey, let’s treat weed like we treat booze,” Houston said. “So, I don’t want to have any discussion about the number of excuses for why this should be allowed to continue.”

When asked why he wants to crack down on cannabis now, he pointed to “the incredible proliferation of these dispensaries. Take a drive down the highway. You might see what I mean.”

Indeed, the section of Highway 102, where it runs through Millbrook First Nation at the centre of the province, is lined with unlicensed cannabis dispensaries.

“I think somebody has to step up, and it should be the government,” Houston said.

Along with Houston, Sipekne’katik banned the province’s Justice Minister Scott Armstrong, and Minister of L’nu (Indigenous) Affairs Leah Martin, as “undesirables” this week and threatened to hit trespassers with $50,000 fines.

“I think it’s bizarre,” Houston said of the ban.

Armstrong said Thursday that cracking down on unlicensed cannabis dispensaries is a priority for the government.

“This isn’t a First Nations issue, this is a public safety issue,” Armstrong told reporters in downtown Halifax. “We have illegal cannabis shops on reserve and off reserve across the province. There are some a stone’s throw from here actually.”

Cannabis sold by the NSLC is approved by Health Canada, he said. “We know what’s in it, we know the potency of what’s in it, and we know it’s pure. That is not the way it is in unlicensed facilities.”

There’s a process that would allow reserves to get their own NSLC outlet that sells legal cannabis, Armstrong said.

“All the proceeds would stay in those communities, and then they use those for positive social programs,” he said, noting there “has been some interest” from the province’s 13 First Nations, though none have signed on yet.

Martin, who is a member of Millbrook First Nation, fended off questions Thursday about whether she should resign over the province’s directive to crack down on unlicensed cannabis shops.

“For every one negative comment you do hear along the way, there is about ten positive people that have reached out since saying wonderful things and saying, ‘Keep going. I appreciate you standing up. I appreciate you doing hard things,’” Martin said.

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Former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Sophie Grégoire Trudeau arriving at Westminster Abbey prior to the coronation ceremony for King Charles III in 2023.

Renowned Canadian trauma-care physician and author Dr. Gabor Maté said he never “thought for a second” Sophie Grégoire Trudeau’s relationship to Justin Trudeau was going to last.

The remark came Tuesday during an almost two-hour long online workshop, “Love, Trauma and the Power of Repair,” that was hosted by Grégoire Trudeau, a self-proclaimed

mental health advocate

.

“The first time I met you three years ago now, in Ottawa, I never thought for a second that your relationship would last, because I tell (you), somebody so close to being themselves, and I just didn’t see how (that relationship could last),” Maté said as he talked about Grégoire Trudeau’s personal drive toward authenticity and the breakdown of her marriage.

It was part of a broader discussion about the tension that Maté said can arise in relationships when partners struggle with authenticity versus attachment.

“The question is, which pain are you going to have,” he asked. “The pain of the loss of the attachment, or the pain of losing yourself. Now, as a child, you have no choice, and as an adult, it’s difficult to come to that choice because it reminds you of the set that yourself as a child every time you want to be yourself.”

Maté went on to point to another well-known politician and political wife, Hillary Clinton.

“So, women tend to absorb the stresses of their men … and their children, like Hillary Clinton. Hillary is a fine example. Her husband was a philander … and she said, ‘I didn’t realize how stressed he was,’ like it was her fault. She learned that in her childhood.”

Although Grégoire Trudeau didn’t respond to Maté’s remark about her marriage, the two went on to discuss wide-ranging topics, including how a relationship can come apart or be repaired.

Justin was 33 and Grégoire Trudeau 29 when they were married in May 2005 in Montreal. After 18 years of marriage, the couple announced their separation in 2023 and shared almost identical statements with the public that asked for privacy for their children.

Since the end of their marriage, Justin and Grégoire Trudeau have lived separate lives but have also been committed to co-parenting their children, Xavier, 18, Ella Grace, 16, and 11-year-old Hadrien.

One week after their split, they

vacationed together in Tofino, B.C.,

with their kids. They reunited for

another family vacation to Jamaica at Christmas

, about two months after it was reported Grégoire Trudeau had been

dating Ottawa pediatric surgeon, Dr. Marcos Bettolli

, possibly since before she and Justin announced their separation.

In early 2024, while promoting her new book, Closer Together: Knowing Ourselves, Loving Each Other, Grégoire Trudeau spoke often about her and Justin’s new reality.

“We are still bound by love and respect and smiles and tears, and we’re still trying to figure it out,”

she told Katie Couric in May

. “And it’s not perfect, but when you keep things honest. Michael J. Fox said, ‘We’re only as sick as our secrets.’”

Toward the end of the workshop, Maté praised Grégoire Trudeau for her weekend appearance on the French Canadian TV show Chanteurs Masqués (Masked Singers).

“She was fantastic,” Maté, a lover of classical music, told the session participants.

“Oh, my God, thank you. I love singing, and I just, it was a playful thing to do,” Grégoire Trudeau responded. “I got my pipes going. So it was a good experience.”

“Well, your singing is fantastic,” said Maté. “I mean, there’s another career there.”

Smiling, Grégoire Trudeau said, “Oh, there we go. In the next workshop, I’ll sing for all of you from my heart.”

That’s when a participant burst in and exclaimed, “So, she beats out Katy Perry.”

Keeping her composure, Grégoire Trudeau did not pick up on the praise but said, “I did not say that.” And added: “Thank you for listening.”

The romance between her ex and the American pop star — including a highly publicized July rendezvous in Montreal, and further fuelled by repeated sightings together since — was officially confirmed by Perry last week when she shared photos on Instagram of the two of them in Japan. On the same trip, the pair

dined with former Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida and his wife, Yuko

.

In October, in the wake of published photos of Trudeau and Perry embracing atop a yacht in California, Grégoire Trudeau acknowledged the “triggers” that come with life in the public eye, but said she chooses not to stay triggered.

“How you react to stuff is your decision,” she said on Arlene Dickinson’s

Arlene Is Alone: The Single Life YouTube show.

“The woman I want to become through this is my decision.”

Grégoire Trudeau’s conversation with Maté was the second of two conversations they have had in recent months. The first was in the spring of 2024 at the

Vancouver Writers Festival

.

 

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“Officers recovered approximately 140 stolen toy items, valued at an estimated $7,500. Most of the recovered items were Jellycat toys,” police said.

An Ontario woman is accused of being a serial Jellycat burglar after a police raid uncovered a large collection of the trendy plush collectible toys at her home, worth an estimated $7,500.

Jellycats are soft, stuffed toys that come in a wide range of whimsical designs, including animals and food items, that have become a trendy, hot collectible craze — reminiscent of Beanie Babies in the 1990s.

The dark side of the Jellycat obsession started to unravel on Oct. 25 when an unspecified number of Jellycats were stolen from a store in Kitchener, Ont.

The store was hit again last Saturday, with Jellycats also the target, Waterloo Regional Police said. The value of plushies from the two heists was about $2,000.

The thefts appeared to be linked and a suspect was identified soon after Saturday’s boost.

Investigators received information that items fitting the description of the stolen toys were being sold online through Facebook Marketplace, a police spokesperson told National Post. Investigators believed the toys were being prepared for sale online.

On Tuesday, police moved in on a home in Guelph armed with a search warrant.

“Officers recovered approximately 140 stolen toy items, valued at an estimated $7,500. Most of the recovered items were Jellycat toys,” police said in a written statement. Police said they believe most of the toys were stolen in the Greater Toronto area.

A police photo of the seized goods shows a table covered with colourful, plush toys, some grouped by type and colour, showing several repeated designs.

There is also a Jellycat sign that looks like it could be from a store display.

The alleged culprit is a 52-year-old Guelph woman.

She was arrested and charged with theft over $5,000, possession of stolen property over $5,000, and trafficking in stolen property.

The charge of trafficking suggests she wasn’t just an admirer and collector.

The U.K.-based company that created Jellycat describes them as a “luxury soft toy.” They often sell at retail in Canada from between $125 and $30, depending on size and design. They frequently appear in social media posts and appeal to a wide age range and are popular internationally.

The accused woman has a court appearance in the new year.

Meanwhile, Waterloo police said they are trying to identify other businesses in Southwestern Ontario that may have been victimized to help rehome the toys.

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