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The interior of a Court of King's Bench courtroom in Alberta. Quang Sac Hoang a two-year conditional sentence, with the first eight months to be served on house arrest, for his role in a fraud scheme.

A traditional Chinese medicine expert who helped trick a retired Calgary couple into investing $77,400 into a “sham” company has been sentenced to house arrest.

Quang Sac Hoang, who immigrated to Canada as a young man in 1990, was convicted of theft, possession of proceeds of crime and money laundering in Alberta’s Court of King’s Bench.

The court heard Hoang was acting as an intermediary within a larger fraud scheme.

“On receipt of this money, he immediately transferred it overseas to Singapore and the money was never recovered,” Justice Michele Hollins wrote in her recent sentencing decision.

The impact of Hoang’s actions on Susan and David Andersen “is significant,” said the judge.

“One can only imagine having worked and saved diligently into one’s 70s, only to have that financial comfort taken away. The other arguably aggravating factor — often present in fraud — is that Mr. Hoang made a free and conscious choice motivated by greed. He had a job, had clients and a stable life and yet chose to risk all of that, and become a convicted criminal, for $3,000,” the fee he received for his role in the scam.

But in her decision dated Nov. 27, Hollins noted “mitigating circumstances as well” in this case.

“Mr. Hoang has made a significant effort to repay a good portion of the loss and is facing a restitution order compelling payment of the rest, notwithstanding that he himself did not benefit to that extent. He has a modest but stable lifestyle and is genuinely remorseful,” said the judge.

She handed Hoang a two-year conditional sentence, with the first eight months to be served on house arrest.

“A conditional sentence may be as onerous as, or perhaps even more onerous than, a jail term, particularly in circumstances where the offender is forced to take responsibility for his or her actions and make reparations to both the victim and the community, all the while living in the community under tight controls,” Hollins said, quoting a case that went all the way to the country’s top court.

“While Mr. Hoang’s sentence must address the sentencing objectives of deterrence and denunciation, it must also comport with the principle of restraint (that the punishment be the least severe possible to achieve general sentencing objectives) and the goal of rehabilitation,” she said, noting Hoang has already paid the Andersens back to the tune of $20,000.

“In my view, given his gainful employment, his maturity, his remorse and the meaningful steps already taken to provide restitution to the Andersens, Mr. Hoang is a very good candidate for rehabilitation and a (conditional sentence order) is a legislatively provided tool for precisely these circumstances.”

While Hoang’s lawyer lobbied the court for house arrest, the Crown argued unsuccessfully that Hoang spend between 18 months and two years behind bars.

“After much due diligence,” the Andersens invested $77,400 “with a company they believed was Chiefswood Investment Management headquartered in Toronto,” Hollins said.

“In reality, that company’s name was being used by fraudsters to trick people like the Andersens into transferring money to bank accounts not related to any legitimate business. Instead, the Andersens’ money was received by Mr. Hoang and immediately transferred (although it took two attempts) to a bank account in Singapore. After trial, I found that Mr. Hoang’s company had been created for this purpose and not for any legitimate business purpose.”

Hoang was not the mastermind behind “the brand-spoofing using the Chiefswood name,” said the judge.

“His role in the overall fraud was therefore arguably minimal but still integral to the outcome. Without his agreement to lease business premises and open a corporate bank account to create the false perception of legitimacy, careful investors like the Andersens would not have been fooled.”

Losing their “hard-earned and carefully managed retirement savings has left (the Andersens) financially vulnerable and personally mistrustful,” Hollins said.

While “not formally trained,” Hoang “has worked in traditional Chinese medicine for most of his adult life and continues to do so, earning approximately $50,000 (gross) per year,” said the judge.

“At the time of sentencing, Mr. Hoang presented a payment of $20,000 towards restitution of the Andersens’ losses. He also made a (translated) statement to the court communicating his shame and regret, as well as his promise to try his best to make restitution of the rest of the money lost.”

Hollins gave Hoang three years to pay back the balance of the $77,445, he took from the Andersens.

She also fined him the same amount, promising that if Hoang defaults, he’ll be incarcerated for 18 months.

“Any amounts paid by Mr. Hoang pursuant to the aforementioned restitution order will reduce the fine by a corresponding amount,” said the judge.

A note on the Chiefswood website indicates the private investment outfit “has no interest” in seeking clients and “no intention” of growing the company. “Anyone soliciting clientele under the guise of Chiefswood Investment Management Inc. should be considered fraudulent and investors are strongly advised to terminate correspondence immediately.”

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Minister of Government Transformation, Public Works and Procurement Joel Lightbound speaks during a press conference at the National Press Theatre in Ottawa, on Thursday, Sept. 25, 2025.

OTTAWA — In 2017, Quebec politicians of all stripes marched in unison in Lévis

to demonstrate their support to Davie shipyard workers

and blast Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government for failing to provide enough contracts to avoid hundreds of more job losses.

One federal government representative showed up to the march: Joël Lightbound.

Frédérick Boisvert, who was then vice president of public affairs for Davie, said he was stunned to see an MP from the Liberal Party of Canada at the march given that it was to protest their government’s refusal to give more contracts to the sole Quebec shipyard.

“When Joël appeared in the picture, I’ll admit that a few people felt their jaw drop,” said Boisvert, who is now head of the Quebec City Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

Lightbound, who was then a first-term MP in Louis-Hébert, quickly let the protesters know that he understood their concerns, and that he would help them revive the shipbuilding industry in Quebec. He quickly won the respect of unions and workers, Boisvert said.

Jean-Yves Duclos, who was then minister of families, remembers this moment well.

As the only other Liberal MP from Quebec City, Duclos was just as frustrated that Davie was not part of the National Shipbuilding Strategy (NSS). But he could not publicly voice that frustration, as a member of cabinet who was bound by government decisions.

“I encouraged him to (go to the march), being unable to do it myself,” he said.

In the end, it was Lightbound’s decision to join the workers and politicians protesting his own government — a “bold” move, by Duclos’ admission, and a sign of “courage,” according to Boisvert, that will serve him well in his new role as Quebec lieutenant.

“Joël fought ferociously inside government — he was one of the great advocates for the Davie shipyard,” said Boisvert.

Duclos said it was rather a group effort to rally the rest of the Quebec caucus and pressure the Trudeau government into opening the NSS and giving the shipyard its fair share of federal contracts to renew the Canadian Coast Guard and Royal Canadian Navy fleets.

About 18 months after that march, the Trudeau government launched the process to select a third Canadian shipyard, in addition to Irving and Seaspan, under the NSS.

Davie officially became the third shipyard to enter the federal strategy in 2023, ensuring that it would benefit from billions in federal contracts for years to come.

At 37 years old, Lightbound became Prime Minister Mark Carney’s new Quebec lieutenant this week, a role he will assume on top of his responsibilities as minister of government transformation, public works and procurement.

But his ascension to cabinet — and in becoming the face of Carney’s government in Quebec — has been anything but smooth.

Lightbound decided to quit a cushy job in a prominent law firm in Montreal in 2013 to move back to Quebec City, where he grew up, to seek the nomination as Liberal candidate for Trudeau’s team at a time when the party was in third place in the polls.

It was a gamble that paid off, as the twenty-something year old won the nomination and won his seat. Trudeau would eventually form a majority government in 2015.

His only other Liberal colleague in the region — Duclos — was part of cabinet during the Trudeau years, which meant that Lightbound would not make the cut, but the young MP would go on to play a variety of roles as parliamentary secretary from 2017 to 2021.

 Prime Minister Mark Carney shakes hands with Procurement Minister Joel Lightbound at a cabinet swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Dec. 1, 2025.

Lightbound’s notoriety would take an unexpected turn when, in the midst of the Freedom Convoy protest in Ottawa,

the MP criticized his own government for politicizing the COVID-19 pandemic

during the 2021 election and for failing to provide a clear plan to lift restrictions.

“Not everyone can earn a living on a MacBook at a cottage,” he famously said.

As a result, Lightbound resigned as chair of the Quebec Liberal caucus and was criticized by colleagues for scoring in his team’s own net at a time when hundreds of protesters were occupying the streets of Ottawa demanding that the Trudeau government step down.

The next few years were spent focusing on his role as chair of the House of Commons industry and technology committee, with the occasional criticism of the Quebec government’s shifting plans to build a “third link” between Quebec City and Lévis.

Days after Chrystia Freeland resigned as finance minister,

Lightbound openly called for Trudeau to step down as leader

. He criticized many of his decisions and said that Trudeau had not been listening to his caucus in recent months.

Lightbound would go on to support Carney in the Liberal leadership race, after Trudeau had announced he would step down, and finally made it to cabinet after the spring election. Duclos, like many other Trudeau-era ministers, was dropped from Carney’s cabinet.

As Procurement Minister, Lightbound managed to drop the bombshell that Canada Post would have to end door-to-door delivery — explaining that the Crown corporation was losing $10 million per day. His announcement received some blowback but it was fairly minimal.

And this week,

Lightbound inherited the role of Quebec lieutenant

from Steven Guilbeault after he resigned from cabinet because of Ottawa’s deal with Alberta for a new oil pipeline.

“The role of Quebec lieutenant is to communicate well with Quebecers, but most importantly, to get the interests of Quebec relayed properly in Ottawa,” said Lightbound shortly after his nomination. “I’m looking forward to playing that role.”

A source with knowledge of Carney’s thinking said Lightbound is an MP with “excellent” political flair who can defend the government against Conservatives, as well as the Bloc Québécois.

The source also said he is part of a new generation of politicians in Quebec who can bring a new and different vision of the future of the province. In addition, he is not from Montreal.

Lightbound said he is looking forward to developing jobs in Quebec in the defence sector and critical minerals, as well as focusing on cost-of-living issues. He also said he is hoping to make the Liberal Party of Canada more visible outside of Quebec’s urban centres.

Of course, he is also taking on the role of Quebec lieutenant at a time when the separatist Parti Québécois is on the rise and could very well form a majority government next year, with its leader promising to hold a third referendum during his first mandate.

If and when that time comes, Duclos thinks Lightbound will be asked to step up in his role as Quebec lieutenant.

“Canada needs Quebec,” he said. “One of his responsibilities… will be to demonstrate not only to Quebecers why Canada is so good for its development, in all respects, but also to demonstrate to the rest of the country how Quebec can reinforce Canada.”

Boisvert said Lightbound is not the type of guy who backs down when things get tough.

“He doesn’t hate getting into a good fight but also doesn’t seek that” he said.

If his advocacy for the Davie shipyard to join the NSS years after the deal was cast in stone is any indication, Lightbound might get called to a new fight — to save Canada.

National Post

calevesque@postmedia.com

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Federal Justice Minister Sean Fraser.

OTTAWA — The thorny question of whether federally-appointed judges should get a $28,000 to $38,000 raise from Ottawa will now be decided by the Federal Court.

Wednesday, the Canadian Superior Courts Judges Association (CSCJA) filed the

first-ever lawsuit asking the Federal Court

to order Minister of Justice Sean Fraser to reconsider his decision to deny the judiciary the raise to their $414,900 annual salary.

In the lawsuit, the association representing 1,400 sitting and retired judges said Fraser did not properly explain why he disregarded a recommendation by the Judicial Compensation and Benefits Commission for the raise.

“None of the three reasons given by the Government are legitimate reasons based on a reasonable factual foundation,” reads the CSCJA’s lawsuit.

This is the first time an association representing the judiciary takes the government to court over judges’ pay since the first quadrennial commission was established in 1999.

The commission was established following a 1997 Supreme Court decision that required a review of judicial compensation by an independent commission. The panel would hear arguments from government and judges and then issue non-binding recommendations that the government must respond to.

In July, the commission recommended

the government increase the “inadequate” salaries by $28,000 for most federally-appointed judges to $36,000 for the chief justice of the Supreme Court. It argued the raise was necessary to keep the bench attractive to “outstanding candidates.”

But in his response to the commission on the eve of budget 2025, Fraser said

the government disagreed with the finding

.

“Current compensation for judges already includes annual indexation and strong pensions,” said his spokesperson Jeremy Bellefeuille, pooh-poohing the conclusion that there was a lack of top candidates to fill judicial vacancies.

The federal government also argued that it would be uncouth to offer judges a raise as Canadians face increasing economic uncertainty and the government is preparing to cut public sector spending and the size of the bureaucracy.

In its lawsuit, the CSCJA said that the response missed the point when responding to the commission’s reasoning leading to the recommended raise.

The association said that instead of arguing with the substance of the commission’s report as well as new data illustrating the gap between judges’ and lawyers’ salary, Fraser simply reiterated the government’s arguments that failed to convince the independent panel in the first place.

“Allowing such a response to stand would render the Commission process meaningless and erode public confidence in the independence of Canada’s courts. A strong, expert, and independent judiciary is essential to the fair and timely delivery of justice,” CSCJA lawyer Jean-Michel Boudreau of IMK LLP

said in a statement

.

Neither Fraser’s office nor the Department of Justice immediately responded to a request for comment.

The quadrennial commissions’ recommendations this summer fell squarely in the middle of the judiciary and the federal government’s positions.

Judges’ associations argued magistrates needed a $60,000 raise retroactive to April 2024 to maintain the appeal of a job that is increasingly struggling to attract “outstanding candidates.” Otherwise, the bench risked another vacancy crisis because the position was unappealing to private sector lawyers, they added.

The federal government countered that judges’ salary and benefits — including “one of the best retirement plans in Canada” — as well as generous indexing did not require a $60,000 “bonus” to keep the job attractive.

The government also said in its arguments to the commission and in its reasons for denying the raise that it couldn’t justify paying judges more as it prepared to cut the public service by 40,000 heads.

But, the CSCJA argues, the government did not impose salary freezes on public servants.

“It was at the very least incumbent on the Government to explain its differential treatment of the judiciary, who are not a class of civil servant,” reads the lawsuit.

“No explanation is provided beyond the Government’s bald statement that judicial salaries are ‘adequate’, reflecting the Government’s unabashed and improper substitution of its own view for that of the independent Commission.”

Ultimately, the CSCJA says that allowing Fraser’s “inadequate” response undermines the quadrennial commission’s work and treats it like a mere formality before the government renders whatever decision it wants to make on judicial compensation.

“The Supreme Court of Canada made clear that while the Government is not required to accept Commission recommendations, if it chooses to depart from them, it has a duty to provide legitimate reasons,” Boudreau said in the CSCJA statement.

“Meaningful engagement with the Commission’s work is not optional, it is a constitutional obligation.”

National Post

cnardi@postmedia.com

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Minister of Justice Sean Fraser in his new office at the Justice building on Parliament Hill.

OTTAWA — A group of advocates representing voices across civil society and faith communities came together on Wednesday to decry what they called the “ever-expanding” scope of the Liberals’ legislation aimed at tackling hate.

It comes as MPs on the parliamentary justice committee begin their clause-by-clause review of the legislation, known as Bill C-9, with voting set to get underway on a series of amendments, including one proposed by the Bloc Québécois to see the Criminal Code scrubbed of an existing religious defence for certain hate speech laws.

That change was not outlined in the original text of the bill, which Justice Minister Sean Fraser presented back in September.

Removing that defence from Canada’s hate speech laws has been a longstanding request of the Bloc Québécois, who, as

National Post reported

this week, struck a deal with the Liberals to see it happen, in exchange for helping the government pass its bill.

Khaled Al-Qazzaz, executive director of the Canadian Muslim Public Affairs Council, on Wednesday voiced concerns that the bill, which was targeted at spaces around places of worship, now appears to be “ever-expanding in ways that is unprecedented.”

His organization, along with the National Council of Canadian Muslims, the Canadian Council of Imams and the Christian Legal Fellowship, have all stated they oppose the removal of the religious defence under section 319 of the Criminal Code, which criminalizes wilfully promoting hate and antisemitism. Canadian law defines the latter as “condoning, denying or downplaying the Holocaust.”

As it is written, the defence states that a person who in “good faith” expressed or tried to communicate an opinion “on a religious subject or an opinion based on a belief in a religious text” should not be convicted under these hate speech laws.

Critics have suggested that removing the provision leaves a vague law that could be applied to legitimate debate and Al-Qazzaz said his faith community views its removal as potentially limiting how religious texts could be promoted within religious schools and broader society.

Tuesday’s meeting of the justice committee was adjourned at the request of the Liberals, with agreement from the Bloc Québécois, before the amendment to remove this defence was officially presented. Amendments are considered confidential before being discussed at committee.

Opposition Conservatives, who have vowed to fight against the proposed exclusion of the measure and decry it as an attack on “religious freedom,” left the committee, expressing confusion, saying that they were prepared to sit for hours longer to review future amendments.

A government source, not authorized to speak publicly, told National Post the adjournment happened because they felt opposition committee members were working in “good faith,” so they ended the meeting around its regularly scheduled time. The next meeting is set for Thursday.

“We remain open to amendments that strengthen protections for communities across Canada in the face of rising hate,” wrote Lola Dandybaeva, a spokeswoman for Fraser.

One of the agreements parties reached during Tuesday’s committee meeting was to maintain the requirement that laying a hate propaganda charge would need the consent of a provincial attorney general.

The bill had proposed removing it as a way to streamline the laying of such charges. However, civil liberties advocates and Conservatives opposed doing it, describing it as a necessary protection for freedom of speech.

The advocates on Wednesday raised concern about other amendments proposed separately by Conservative MP Roman Baber and Liberal MP Anthony Housefather, who both brought forward suggestions about adding to the bill an offence against the “wilful promotion of terrorism.”

Canada does not currently have laws against the “promotion” or “glorification” of terrorism.

Tim McSorley, national coordinator of the International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group, said on Wednesday that the consideration for adding such an offence raises concerns because promotion, as a concept, was “incredibly vague” and could apply to “legitimate discussion.”

“It’s incredibly broad and could lead to significant criminalization of discussion of current affairs, of legitimate political discussions and debates,” McSorley told the news conference.

“We think that it has no place in Canadian legislation overall, and certainly no place in being brought in as part of an ostensibly combating hate legislation.”

McSorley compared the effort to laws ushered in under former prime minister Stephen Harper through an anti-terror bill back in 2015, which was criticized for overreaching police and security powers.

Baber referenced those Harper efforts during his testimony before Tuesday’s committee, saying that “a gap” currently exists, which he says has allowed for the “promotion of terror.”

The MP, who has been vocal in his opposition to anti-Israel protests staged around his Toronto riding, had presented a private member’s bill on the matter to the House of Commons last month, which sought to criminalize the promotion of a terrorist group or “terrorist activity.”

He specifically named the action of calling for an “intifada in Canada” or activities that promote a listed terrorist entity, such as Hamas, the governing group in Gaza responsible for carrying out the Oct. 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel.

Officials who testified before Tuesday’s committee said the courts have interpreted “promotion” to mean “active support or instigation” and more than “simple encouragement or advancement.”

The civil society advocates who spoke on Wednesday represented a group of about 20 different organizations and groups that oppose the government bill in its entirety.

They warned that the legislation’s proposals to create new intimidation and obstruction offences targeted at the activities around places of worship and other buildings where an identifiable group gathers could lead to a quashing of legitimate protests.

Jewish advocacy groups, such as the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, have said measures were needed to better protect members of the Jewish community who have been dealing with impeded access to spaces and a police-reported rise in antisemitism over the Israel-Hamas war.

Civil liberties advocates have also raised concerns about the bill’s proposal to make it an offence to promote hate by displaying a hate symbol like a swastika, or an image related to a listed terrorist entity, warning that police could misinterpret certain Arabic phrases.

Liberal MP Salma Zahid said on Wednesday that she’s “heard some concerns” about the bill.

“I think all conversations around censorship are fraught,” said Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith.

“We have to be very careful when it comes to adding additional rules that restrict speech. And so I will look at it very carefully.”

National Post

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Amid ongoing tensions between Canada and the U.S. and recent changes to American travel policies, it's important for Canadians to be informed ahead of reaching border.

As Canadians gear up for the holiday season, many will be taking trips to the United States. Canadian travellers are at the discretion of American border officers, who may ask questions about relationship status, work history and living situation.

It could raise a red flag if a Canadian is going to the U.S. and has an American spouse, immigration lawyer Ksenia Tchern McCallum at Tchern McCallum Immigration Law told National Post over email. That’s because some people may visit and then remain in the U.S. to apply for a visa within the country.

Amid

ongoing tensions between Canada and the U.S.

and recent changes to

American travel policies

, it’s important for Canadians to be informed ahead of reaching border. Travelling to the U.S. for Canadians is “not business as usual.”

“The U.S. now has enhanced security which includes obtaining fingerprints and photographs of visitors. Canadians who stay 30 days or longer must register with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services after they enter the country. And, those who don’t comply face fines up to $5,000 or jail time,” she said.

To avoid the red flag being raised about a cross-border relationship, Canadians going to the U.S. should be prepared to explain to officers how they maintain the relationship and “what concrete ties they have to Canada that demonstrate they will return after their visit,” said Tchern McCallum.

“This can include a full-time job, family obligations, a lease or mortgage, pets, or any other commitments that anchor them to Canada,” she said.

If a relationship is new, there might not be an established back and forth history of travel between the countries, she said. Officers may ask more detailed questions. They could inquire about the purpose of the visit, length of stay, living arrangements, and who is covering expenses.

“Having an itinerary and answers prepared can significantly ease the process,” Tchern McCallum advised.

“If there is a future intention for the American spouse to sponsor the Canadian spouse (or vice versa), the Canadian can be upfront about this. Explaining that you understand the proper immigration process, that you are not trying to immigrate without authorization, and that any future move will be done through a formal application often reassures officers.”

She added: “It shows transparency, awareness of the rules, and respect for U.S. immigration requirements.”

More advice for Canadians going to the U.S. includes making sure to have “supporting evidence of your ties to Canada” if travel plans are for a prolonged period of time.

“This could include an employment confirmation letter, pay stubs, bank statements, lease or mortgage statements, utility bills, etc.,” she said. “Proof of insurance and financial ability to support yourself while in the U.S. is also important, especially for Canadians staying over 30 days.”

Tchern McCallum also said that Canadian travellers, in particular snowbirds, who want to avoid being turned away at the border should have a return flight booked. “If not, you’ll be flagged,” she said  in a news release by iAmbic Communications.

“Have you overstayed the pre-determined time of your visit in the past? If so, you could be questioned or refused entry,” she said.

Canadian travellers who visit the U.S. frequently should also be prepared to be questioned about it and provide detailed answers. She said it’s best not to be evasive, as that could also lead to denied entry.

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.


Anastasia Zorchinsky was told in a Montreal passport office that she could not designate Israel as her birth country.

A Jewish Montreal woman says federal officials have offered her only a limited apology after passport office employees told her she could not indicate Israel as her country of birth because of “political conflict.”
Anastasia Zorchinsky is a Canadian citizen but was born in Kfar Saba, in central Israel. However, she says Service Canada officials told her because of the “political conflict we cannot put Israel in your passport.” Alternatively, she was told she could have indicated her birth country as Palestine, and that Kfar Saba was one of several cities that was allegedly caught by this policy shift, including Jerusalem.
She and her lawyer, Neil Oberman, suspect the episode stems from Prime Minister Mark Carney’s decision to recognize the state of Palestine.

Ultimately, officials at the passport office relented when she pushed back.

And in a
Nov. 29 Instagram post
, she said she received her passport with Israel identified as her birth country.

Meanwhile, Oberman wrote a letter to the Montreal passport office and Service Canada on Nov. 12, (

posted to his Instagram

), seeking an explanation for what happened. The response received last week from 

Cliff Groen

, the chief operating officer for Service Canada was not forthcoming, says Oberman.

“While we appreciate the quick response,” Oberman told National Post in an interview on Wednesday, “it was an apology but not an apology. It did not offer an explanation.”

He suspects the quick reply was driven by the intense media attention Zorchinsky’s case has received, including the National Post and 

The New York Times

. (He is not publicly sharing Groen’s letter, he says, out of deference to the government.)

During the same interview with the Post, Zorchinsky emphasized her concern that “this doesn’t happen to anyone else. It’s abnormal. It’s not okay.”

Moreover, she says, Groen’s response was “totally insufficient. This is why Neil and I decided to write a second letter.”

In the follow-up letter to Groen, dated Nov. 27 (

posted on Oberman’s LinkedIn

account), Oberman notes that Groen stated passport staff “may have caused some confusion” and Service Canada must “regularly review” it’s operational tools.

Yet, he adds, Groen did not state why passport office staff “invented rationales having no basis in policy.”

And Oberman insists that issuing the new passport with the correct information does not excuse or explain staff conduct.

He renewed his demands for the policy/operational documents supporting the statements passport office staff made to Zorchinsky. Further, he stated that if such documents can’t be provided, then an explanation as to why needs to be forthcoming.

He also requested confirmation of an internal review of the incident.

Finally, he intends to file complaints before the Canadian Human Rights Commission and the federal ombudperson if a substantive response is not provided by mid-December. He also threatened to file an application for judicial review before the Federal Court.

What happened to his client was not “merely a clerical mistake,” insists Oberman in

a post on Instagram

, adding, “It was the application of non-existent rules, delivered with confidence.”

Both Zorchinksy and Oberman point to the federal government’s decision to recognize Palestine as a state, without consultation with Canadians, as the potential source for such incidents. The move has given license to people with anti-Israel political views and Jewish people “have been suffering” as a result, says Oberman.

He adds that “this is not a Jewish issue. All Canadians have the right to government service” without the influence of geopolitics. 

He says Zorchinsky’s story has prompted other Canadians to share their experiences. They are “collecting and examining” them and considering whether further legal intervention may be sought in the future.

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This image shows what appears to be a dentist's chair, surrounded by masks on the walls.

Newly released pictures and video from Jeffrey Epstein’s two private islands in the U.S. Virgin Islands show what looks to be a dentist’s office, several bedrooms and bathrooms, and a partially redacted view of a phone and a blackboard.

The images from Little Saint James and Great Saint James islands came from the U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Justice,

according to a statement

from the Democrats on the House Oversight Committee, which released them on social media on Wednesday.

 This redacted image of a blackboard shows words that include “power” and “deception.”

Last month the committee sent a request to the U.S. Virgin Islands Attorney General for documents, communications and other information pertaining to investigations or potential criminal investigations of Jeffrey Epstein or Ghislaine Maxwell, his former associate. “These new images are a disturbing look into the world of Jeffrey Epstein and his island,” said Robert Garcia, a Representative from California and the committee’s ranking member.

 Another redacted image shows several names on a phone.

“We are releasing these photos and videos to ensure public transparency in our investigation and to help piece together the full picture of Epstein’s horrific crimes. We won’t stop fighting until we deliver justice for the survivors,” he said in a statement, adding: “It’s time for President Trump to release all the files, now.”

The committee said it has also received records from J.P. Morgan and Deutsche Bank pertaining to accounts previously held by Epstein. Oversight Democrats intend to release those  files to the public after review in the days ahead.

 This is one of several images of bedrooms and bathrooms that were released.

Last month, U.S. President Donald Trump signed legislation to compel the Department of Justice to release files on Epstein. This was after spending months trying to block their release in a fight that inflamed tensions in his party and threatened to undermine his agenda, by detracting from other issues he wanted the public and the media to focus on.

Epstein, a convicted sex offender, was facing federal charges of trafficking underage girls when he died in jail in 2019.

 A “No Trespassing” sign is seen on one of the two islands.

Maxwell, who had a romantic relationship with Epstein in the 1990s and remained closely associated with him until his death, was sentenced to 20 years on child sex trafficking and other offences in 2022. She was moved to a minimum-security federal prison in Bryan, Texas, in August from a prison in Florida.

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Minister of Public Safety Gary Anandasangaree speaks in the Foyer of the House of Commons in Ottawa, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2025.

OTTAWA — A key intelligence watchdog is calling on the government to urgently review its governing law after cancelling a review of Canada’s spy agency due to a lack of proper legal protection for its staff.

The decision to cancel the review was not taken lightly, says the head of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA), because the watchdog had already found “issues of concern” with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS).

“NSIRA’s inability to proceed with this pertinent review highlights the urgency and necessity of legislative reforms intended to be a part three-year review of the National Security Act, 2017,” reads a

2024 review termination letter

sent by NSIRA chair Marie Deschamps to then-Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc.

A similar letter was also sent

to then-CSIS Director David Vigneault. Both letters have gone largely unnoticed and unreported since it was posted quietly on NSIRA’s website in February.

At issue, the watchdog says, is the failure to include “standardized” immunity for its staff from being dragged into civil litigation related to topics they review when the NSIRA Act was passed in 2019. A simple but pressing fix, it argues.

NSIRA is Canada’s largest intelligence watchdog. It has the power to review any intelligence and defence activity conducted by a federal organization as well as investigating certain national security-related complaints.

Because of its broad review mandate and power to obtain nearly any information it wants from the organizations it reviews, NSIRA guards the identity of its employees closely.

In March 2024, NSIRA began a review of CSIS’s regional units as well as the “adequacy and accessibility” of its internal complaints process. In other words, it was looking into how well CSIS’s Canadian satellite offices were governed and if its internal whistleblower process was effective.

But within three months, the watchdog realized it had two issues. The first was that there were multiple civil lawsuits related to the very issues it was reviewing.

The second was that, unlike other federal watchdogs like the Auditor General or the Privacy Commissioner, NSIRA’s governing legislation didn’t protect its reviewers from being compelled to reveal themselves and testify about their work in a parallel civil lawsuit.

The agency doesn’t cite the litigation at issue, but a few months before the review, The Canadian Press revealed that two female employees of CSIS’s B.C. regional office had filed separate lawsuits alleging they were raped by a superior.

They also alleged their internal complaints were dismissed due to a flawed system — the same system NSIRA was reviewing.

Since there was a possibility that NSIRA staff and their work could be subpoenaed by civil litigants because there was nothing in the law to prevent it, the watchdog decided to cancel the review three months in.

Since then, NSIRA has asked both LeBlanc and current Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree to add the same immunity for its reviewers from parallel civil litigation.

In an interview, NSIRA vice-chair Craig Forcese and Executive Director Charles Fugères said this was the first and only time to date the watchdog felt compelled to cancel a review because of this issue.

But they warned that it would likely impact NSIRA’s ability to conduct future reviews of intelligence issues that have a risk of associated civil litigation.

In other words, it risks creating a blind spot for the watchdog agency with the power to review nearly any intelligence or national security function in the federal government.

“We chose to do this review. We thought it was important to do this review, and we’re not doing this review right. So that’s all that’s already an undesirable outcome,” said Forcese.

“In circumstances where we know that a given topic is one that attracts civil litigation, we may decide not to proceed with the review,” he added.

Minister Anandasangaree’s office did not respond to a request for comment by time of publication.

National Post

cnardi@postmedia.com

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks to a delegation of American legislators in Jerusalem on Sept. 15, 2025.

The Gaza war mostly behind him – or perhaps not – Benjamin Netanyahu must soon face a volatile Israeli electorate.

The country will go to the polls by next fall, assuming his thin coalition government can pass a budget by spring.

Israelis are sharply divided over the man who has dominated their country’s politics for 30 years, and who was on watch when Hamas terrorists overran southern Israel on October 7, 2023.

Few Israelis are more torn about Bibi than Israeli-Canadians; an estimated 35,000 Canadian citizens live in the Jewish state. For many of them, questions remain about Netanyahu’s wartime leadership, political survival and Israel’s future, reflecting the anxiety and divisions of postwar Israel.

“To say it’s complicated is an understatement,” noted Meir Balofsky, 49, from Ramat Gan, who moved from Toronto 21 years ago.

“Look, yes, we know he’s a great orator, and he knows how to make friends with America, and that’s good, I guess, as a politician.”

But it comes with an asterisk.

“I think he has to go. The brand of Israel has been so tarnished, and he’s the face of it. I think Israel desperately needs a reset again. You can say it’s fair or not. Doesn’t really matter. The reality is that the world opinion of Bibi is that he is a monster, and Israel is now a pariah state. He’s never groomed a successor.”

Ahuva, Balofsky’s wife, added that Netanyahu, “has reached a point in his career where he doesn’t trust anyone else’s ability to do what he can do, and so in his mind, he’s the only suitable leader for the country. And the ends justify the means; he can do anything that he needs to do to stay in power for the good of the country. I think that’s a little bit of a scary place to be for a leader, because I do think he’s still the better candidate from the options on the table, but that doesn’t mean he’s a great candidate anymore.”

Israel’s longest serving prime minister, Netanyahu was first elected in 1996, then returned to power 2009, 2013, 2015 and 2022, where by the latest possible election date of Oct. 27, 2026, he will have served some 7,000 days – or 19 years.

Ben Waxman, 64, a tech writer in Ariel, is not a fan of the prime minister but said he has “mixed feelings.”

“He has some great aspects to him. Netanyahu is a true Zionist in every sense of the word. He is able to decide what are his priorities and what aren’t. That means that things that aren’t his priority he will sell to the highest bidder,” he said.

One example, Waxman said, is that Netanyahu “couldn’t care less” about “religion and state issues,” and caters too often to the religious parties for votes.

“There is a certain advantage to that approach, in that Netanyahu stays focused. On the other hand, for concerned citizens, it can be infuriating that he has no principles in these areas. He is extremely intelligent, well-read and able to understand how to navigate difficult waters. On the other hand, once he has decided something, nothing will change his mind.”

One of Waxman’s biggest criticisms of Netanyahu over the last two years was “his absolute refusal to speak to the country via the press.”

Netanyahu has also faced a long-running trial on corruption charges; on Sunday, Netanyahu asked Israel’s president to pardon him, even as he denies any wrongdoing: “An immediate conclusion of the trial would greatly help to lower the flames and promote the broad reconciliation that our country so desperately needs,” Netanyahu said in a videotaped statement.

Shai Reef, a 30-year-old former Torontonian who has lived in Israel for three years, says Netanyahu “has many flaws,” but Reef thinks he is “probably the best leader Israel can hope for right now.”

He added: “There’s no other political leader close to the prime minister’s office with both an ideological compass and the ability to navigate the geopolitical landscape.” That includes being able to try “to resist Washington’s agenda for our region.”

Reef is less fond of Bibi’s economic policies and what he describes as “rhetoric” about “Judeo-Christian values, or ‘civilization versus barbarism,’” which Reef said “sounds very colonialist.”

Sahar Silverman, 27, who moved from Toronto to Jerusalem on Oct. 7, 2024 – a year after the Hamas-led attacks – said Netanyahu was “the best option we have right now.”

She cited his “great powers as a leader” but who has caved to “external pressures” from the United States.

“He needs to start making decisions independent of what he thinks the world, or Trump wants, because otherwise we will just continue the same cycle,” meaning that Israel’s enemies benefit from global pressure. An example she gave was of the Gilad Shalit deal in 2011, where the Israeli soldier held hostage by Hamas was traded for 1,000 Palestinian prisoners.

“As long as he keeps walking the line of appeasement, we will never have true peace. It’s time to start making decisions based on what the country needs, and not what the rest of the world demands from us.”

This very sentiment was expressed by one prominent non-Canadian, member of Knesset Amit Halevi, who made it clear he wasn’t happy with the White House-led negotiated Gaza agreement signed in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, on Oct. 9.

“Was Israel pressured by Trump, forced to take what’s happening now in Gaza, with Qatar, Turkey? No doubt about it,” the member of the Knesset’s foreign affairs and defence committee told the National Post in a meeting facilitated by the Toronto-based Exigent Foundation.

Halevi, a member of Netanyahu’s Likud Party, emphatically added he was “absolutely opposed” to the ceasefire deal.

“So what do you think should be done? What every nation does in a war. Victory. To fight and to win,” he said.

 Israelis protest against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, including a sign suggesting he is like a monarch, in Tel Aviv on Jan. 21, 2023.

The problem, he intimated, was that Donald Trump has it wrong believing that Russia and China are the most dangerous enemies of the West, rather than “radical neo-Marxist progressive forces” and “radical Islam.”

Max Lightstone, a Torontonian who now lives in Jerusalem, said Bibi’s priorities are to keep himself in power, and “out of prison.”

The 31-year-old engineer continued: “His ministers are the open subject of ridicule, with his transportation minister so out of touch with the citizenry, it’s ridiculous. He has failed on both security and diplomatic fronts, bringing Israel to the lowest level of safety and PR. He fires his only competent staff, because his wife doesn’t like them. He’s secular, but throws the secular sector under the bus to appease the Haredim (ultra-Orthodox).”

Jack Benaim, 44, a Torontonian who lived in Tel Aviv, said that Netanyahu “somehow manages to evade responsibility.”

He criticized the prime minister for never having visited Hostage Square in Tel Aviv, the grassroots central site for gathering, protest and memorial for Gaza hostages and their families.

“Instead he politicized them, attacked families, when the last group of hostages were finally released. It was Trump that delivered them. I still can’t find one of those families or hostages who thanked him. How can it be?”

Benaim also holds the prime minister accountable for public divisions in the Jewish state, before and after October 7.

“He is a walking conflict of interest, who ripped the social fabric of Israeli society to the point that every institution in the state, and most notably the Israel Defense Forces and Israel Air Force, were compromised prior to October 7, 2023,” he asserted.

“It’s time for Israel to turn the page from Bibi Netanyahu, and October 7.”

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Minister of Industry Mélanie Joly responds to a question during question period in the House of Commons in Ottawa, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025.

OTTAWA — Auto giant Stellantis says the government, not the company, insisted on redacting copies of a controversial agreement with Ottawa worth hundreds of millions of dollars requested by a Commons committee.

A letter sent to the House Government Operations Committee by Stellantis appears to contradict testimony by top Industry Canada (ISED) officials last week that redactions to the agreement sent to MPs were requested by the auto giant.

In response to the letter, Industry Minister Mélanie Joly told National Post Tuesday that her department would finally release the unredacted agreement to the committee after repeatedly refusing to do so.

“I received the letter (from Stellantis) earlier. There’s no problem, we’ll remove the redactions and send it to the committee,” Joly said.

But the contradicting claims between Stellantis and ISED about who requested the agreement be redacted against the committee’s will raises a new question: who may have lied to MPs?

On that question, Joly demurred. But Conservative and Bloc Québécois committee members said both ISED and Stellantis will have to come explain themselves to Parliamentarians, beginning with the company this Thursday.

“I’m shocked to receive a letter like that from Stellantis,” Conservative MP Kelly Block said in an interview. “Someone is not telling us the truth, and now we have to get to the bottom of it.”

Since October, members of the Government Operations Committee have argued with Stellantis, the federal government and amongst themselves over a demand to receive unredacted copies of an agreement between Stellantis and Ottawa.

The agreements relate to hundreds of millions of dollars in incentives for Stellantis through the federal Strategic Investment Fund (SIF) for the company to maintain and grow its assembly plant in Brampton, Ont.

But the deals have come under intense scrutiny after Stellantis announced in mid-October it was moving production of certain Jeeps from the Ontario plant to the U.S. amid pressure by Donald Trump’s administration to boost American auto manufacturing.

Days after Stellantis’s announcement, committee members passed a motion demanding unredacted copies of all agreements since 2015 between Stellantis and Ottawa relating to the company’s Brampton Assembly Plant.

Parliamentary privilege grants committees a near-absolute Constitutional power to demand the full production of any document or witness in Canada to advance their Parliamentary duties.

But instead of unredacted documents, ISED only produced a redacted version of the agreements and annexes, raising questions among committee members of a potential breach of Parliamentary privilege.

When asked by committee members last week why ISED only released a redacted deal as opposed to a fully unredacted copy to be reviewed in camera by MPs, the department’s top bureaucrat repeatedly pointed the finger at Stellantis.

“In our discussions with Stellantis, we were comfortable with the redactions that they brought to this document,” ISED deputy minister Philip Jennings said.

At another moment, ISED director general Denis Martel confirmed to the committee that Stellantis had requested that the information redacted be kept confidential.

Stellantis was also scheduled to appear at the meeting virtually but ultimately failed to do so, citing IT problems.

So, MPs were stunned when Stellantis’ director of external affairs Teresa Piruzza wrote the committee on Tuesday saying the complete opposite of ISED officials during the committee meeting she missed.

“To be clear: Stellantis did not propose or suggest any of the redactions applied to the version of the SIF Agreement that the Committee received from ISED,” Piruzza wrote in a letter obtained by National Post.

“All of the redactions reflected in the SIF Agreement provided to the Committee were proposed to Stellantis by ISED when it requested Stellantis’s consent to share the SIF Agreement with this Committee — consent that Stellantis provided,” reads the letter.

She added that Stellantis “would not object” to ISED providing MPs with the unredacted form insofar as certain safeguards were put in place, such as it be only viewed by committee members in paper form and be consulted behind closed doors.

ISED did not immediately respond to questions about the conflicting perspective offered by Stellantis.

In a statement, Bloc Québécois MP and Government Operations Committee member Marie-Hélène Gaudreau was outraged.

“If this information is true, it is astonishing that the Industry department claimed Stellantis was uncomfortable with the disclosure of information related to the contract when this was simply not the case,” she wrote.

“There is a blatant lack of transparency, a lack of accountability. The government is treating parliamentarians like mere spectators and is not respecting the essential work of parliamentary committees,” she added.

Block, the Conservative MP, said Stellantis’ letter created far more questions than answers.

“We called for unredacted documents, and we received redacted documents, and we’re told it’s because Stellantis refused to give us anything but redacted,” she said. “I don’t understand it.”

When asked to comment, Liberal MP and committee member Jenna Sudds waved a reporter off and walked away.

National Post

cnardi@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 politics newsletter, First Reading, here.