Four charged in $2M drug investigation in Scarborough

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

Four charged in $2M drug investigation in Scarborough Toronto police have charged four people in connection with a drug investigation after a vehicle stop in Scarborough.On June 4 officers responded to a call about a suspected impaired driver in the Morningside Avenue and Ellesmere Road area where they allegedly found a vehicle stopped in the middle of the road with an unconscious male in the driver’s seat.A quantity of drugs and money were in the vehicle along with a laptop, a machine to cut identification cards and counterfeit Ontario Ministry of Transportation items.Stephen Sampson, 32, of Toronto, was charged with impaired driving, failure or refusal to provide a sample, almost 70 drug-related charges, and possession of proceeds of crime over $5,000.Investigators obtained search warrants for Sampson’s residence in the Lawrence Avenue East and Beechgrove Drive area where cash, drug paraphernalia, equipment to make fake prescription bottle labels and a number of drugs with an approximate street value of up to $2,000,000 w...

Stock market today: Wall Street gains ground to extend winning streak

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

Stock market today: Wall Street gains ground to extend winning streak NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street turned solidly higher Thursday following a weak start as a messy mix of economic reports yielded no clear sign about where the economy and inflation are heading.The S&P 500 was 0.9% higher in afternoon trading, coming off its highest level since April 2022. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 377 points, or 1.1%, at 34,357, as of 1:33 p.m. Eastern time, while the Nasdaq composite was 0.7% higher.Homebuilder Lennar helped lead the S&P 500 with a gain of 3.6% after reporting stronger profit and revenue for the latest quarter than expected. It also gave a stronger-than-expected forecast for upcoming deliveries, saying customers are accepting the “new normal” of higher interest rates. Kroger, meanwhile, sank to one of the market’s sharper losses after reporting slightly weaker revenue for the latest quarter than expected. It fell 2.9% despite also reporting stronger profit than expected and reaffirming many of its financial forecasts for the year....

International court prosecutor to probe crimes in eastern Congo following government request

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

International court prosecutor to probe crimes in eastern Congo following government request THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court said Thursday he is opening a preliminary probe in Congo after the African nation asked him to investigate alleged crimes in its North Kivu province since January last year.The request marks the second time Congolese authorities have sought an investigation by the global war crimes court. Congo, a member state of the court, first requested a probe in 2004 into crimes since 2002. That led to three convictions of rebel leaders involved in the long-running armed conflict in the mineralrich nation.Prosecutor Karim Khan said that Congo’s new request — known at the court as a referral — asks prosecutors to “investigate particular armed forces and groups” allegedly responsible for crimes in the eastern province of North Kivu.Conflict has been simmering for decades in eastern Congo, where more than 120 armed groups are fighting. Most are vying for land and control of mines with valuable minerals, wh...

CP NewsAlert: Wildfire evacuation order lifted for Tumbler Ridge, B.C.

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

CP NewsAlert: Wildfire evacuation order lifted for Tumbler Ridge, B.C. An evacuation order has been lifted for the community of Tumbler Ridge, B.C., nine days after more than 2,000 residents were forced out by an encroaching wildfire. More comingThe Canadian Press

Nova Scotia man who served 16 years after wrongful conviction dead at 67, lawyer says

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

Nova Scotia man who served 16 years after wrongful conviction dead at 67, lawyer says HALIFAX — A lawyer for Glen Assoun, the Nova Scotia man who served 16 years in prison after he was wrongfully convicted of killing his ex-girlfriend, confirmed today that his longtime client has died.Sean MacDonald says Assoun, 67, died suddenly Wednesday night while he was at a restaurant in Dartmouth, N.S.Assoun was convicted by a jury of second-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison in September 1999 for the stabbing death of Brenda Lee Anne Way in Dartmouth — a crime that has yet to be solved.One of Assoun’s lawyers began reviewing the case, and he persuaded the Association in Defence of the Wrongly Convicted to take it on in 2010.In 2014, the federal Justice Department said a preliminary assessment determined there could have been a miscarriage of justice, and an in-depth investigation was ordered before Assoun was released from prison with conditions in November 2014.In March 2019, the Nova Scotia Supreme Court dismissed Assoun’s conviction, and he later agr...

Record revenue and attendance has business booming again for the American Hockey League

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

Record revenue and attendance has business booming again for the American Hockey League More than 10,000 fans filled the Hershey Bears’ home arena on Tuesday night to watch the oldest American Hockey League franchise take on the newest, the Coachella Valley Firebirds, in the Calder Cup Finals.It was the third consecutive game in the AHL championship series to be sold out and pushed total playoff attendance for the NHL’s top developmental league above half a million fans. That’s a record for the nearly 90-year-old league that also set a new high water mark for revenue, which president and CEO Scott Howson estimates is 15% to 20% above pre-pandemic levels.Three years after canceling the playoffs and two years after gutting through a shortened season with almost no fans in arenas and a few teams opting out of playing entirely, business is finally booming again for the AHL.“We’ve just recovered so quickly,” Howson told The Associated Press this week. “It’s a testament to our product. It’s a testament to our markets. It’s a testament to what our teams are ...

Man indicted in chokehold death of New York subway rider Jordan Neely, prosecutor confirms

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

Man indicted in chokehold death of New York subway rider Jordan Neely, prosecutor confirms NEW YORK (AP) — A grand jury has indicted a man who put an agitated New York City subway rider in a fatal chokehold, prosecutors confirmed Thursday.Daniel Penny was initially charged with manslaughter last month in the May 1 death of Jordan Neely, a former Michael Jackson impersonator who struggled in recent years with homelessness and mental illness.A spokesperson for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg confirmed the grand jury voted to indict, a day after the news was widely reported. The specific charges will be unveiled during Penny’s arraignment on June 28th. He had initially been charged with manslaughter in the second degree, which carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison, but a grand jury’s approval of charges was needed for the case to continue.Neely was shouting at passengers and begging for money when Penny, a former U.S. Marine, pinned him to the floor of the moving subway car with the help of two other riders. Penny then held Neely in a chokehold...

US Open a source of uncertainty on and off the course

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

US Open a source of uncertainty on and off the course LOS ANGELES (AP) — Uncertainty off the course. Uncertainty on it. The U.S. Open was set to tee off into uncharted territory Thursday, with the golf world perplexed by the recent shakeup-makeup between Saudi golf interests and the PGA Tour and 156 of the sport’s best players taking on a course hardly anyone has seen. Pretty much every question heading into the 123rd playing of America’s national championship dealt with one or the other of those issues. Los Angeles Country Club is a beautiful mystery, the first course in LA to host the Open in 75 years. It’s known for its runway-wide fairways — they average 43 yards across — but many of those expanses are heavily canted, built to reject tee shots into the healthy, spongy Bermuda rough or into the native, scrub-dotted and unpredictable sandscapes called barrancas that wind through this urban oasis.There is a reachable par 4 — the sixth hole — that will, at times, play shorter than the downhill par-3 seventh. ThereR...

Ontario driver had 5 times legal limit of alcohol following crash: OPP

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

Ontario driver had 5 times legal limit of alcohol following crash: OPP Provincial police in Southern Ontario have charged a driver following a crash and subsequent blood test that revealed a remarkable level of impairment.The driver in question was involved in a collision on April 21 in the Municipality of Huron East. Police say a pickup truck crashed into a hydro pole in a rural area about 40 kilometres southeast of Goderich.Both the truck and pole sustained significant damage and the driver was taken to hospital with serious injuries. No one else was injured in the crash.Police say further investigation revealed the driver had consumed alcohol sometime before the collision. Investigators obtained a warrant for his blood sample and a test was taken at the hospital.The driver’s blood alcohol content came back as 0.409 — or five times the legal limit of 0.08. According to the Cleveland Clinic, anything blood/alcohol level over 0.4 is considered potentially fatal.Over 5 times the legal limit?!?! #HuronOPP has charged a 43-yr-old @HuronEast re...

UN chief says fossil fuels ‘incompatible with human survival,’ calls for credible exit strategy

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:56:05 GMT

UN chief says fossil fuels ‘incompatible with human survival,’ calls for credible exit strategy BERLIN (AP) — The head of the United Nations launched an angry tirade against fossil fuel companies Thursday, accusing them of betraying future generations and undermining efforts to phase out a product he called “incompatible with human survival.”Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also dismissed suggestions by some oil executives — including the man tapped to chair this year’s international climate talks in Dubai — that fossil fuel firms can keep up production if they find a way to capture planet-warming carbon emissions. He warned that this would just make them “more efficient planet-wreckers.”It’s not the first time the U.N. chief has called out Big Oil over its role in causing global warming, but the blunt attack reflects growing frustration at the industry’s recent profit bonanza despite warnings from scientists that burning fossil fuels will push the world far beyond any safe climate threshold.“Last year, the oil and gas industry reaped a record $4 trillion windfall in net inc...