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Crime Beat

Last post 07-15-2008, 5:40 PM by Paladin. 167 replies.
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  •  08-28-2006, 3:58 PM

    Crime Beat

     

    2006/08/28

     





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    2006/8/28

    Armed Robbery, Moncton, N.B.

    At 11:33 am on Monday, August 28, 2006, the Codiac Regional RCMP responded to a robbery at 1633 Mountain Road, Moncton. A man believed to be in his mid thirties entered the Bank of Montreal and demanded cash from the teller. No one was injured. The man fled on foot.

    He is described as having a small build, 5' 4" tall and spoke english.

    Anyone with information is asked to call Codiac Regional RCMP at (506) 857-2400.
     
    ==
     
    2006/8/28

    Sackville RCMP ask the public for assistance, Aulac, N.B.

    The Sackville RCMP is asking the assistance of the public regarding a sighting of man fitting the description of Roy LEWIS, who was reported missing in November 25, 2004. A witness reports seeing a man fitting Lewis's description, walking on the westbound side of Highway #2 at Aulac N.B. The man then got into an older model blue Chevrolet ½ton pick-up truck near exit #513.

    The man had shoulder length hair, silver in color, wearing blue jeans and a light blue jacket with white stripe. The RCMP ask the driver of the pick-up truck, who picked up this hitch-hiker in Aulac at approximately 10:00am, August 28, 2006 to contact their detachment at (506)533-5151.

    =======
    2006/8/27

    Armed Robbery, Burnt Church, N.B.

    The District 8 RCMP are investigation an armed robbery which occurred on Thursday, August 24, 2006 at 5:00am. The suspect had requested a taxi driver for a ride from the Miramichi to Burnt Church, N.B. Once the taxi arrived in Burnt Church, the suspect robbed the 72 year old taxi driver at knife point and took his money. The suspect then ran away.

    The suspect was , 5'7", small build and had dark black hair with a dark complexion. He was wearing a grey hooded sweater, dark pants and sneakers.

    The investigation is continuing.

    Any person with information regarding this suspect or this crime, is asked to contact the District 8 RCMP at (506)393-3001
    ====
     

    2006/8/27

    Marihuana seizure, Acadian Peninsula, N.B.

    The District 8 RCMP, with the assistance of the RCMP helicopter, seized approximately 850 marihuana plants that were discovered in provincial woodlots throughout the Acadian Peninsula. This seizure has eliminated the possibility 42,000 marihuana joints from being sold on the illicit market.
    =====

     

    Two armed robberies on weekend


    SAINT JOHN - Saint John Police are investigating two armed robberies over the weekend.

    On Sunday, about 10:43 a.m., a lone male entered the Eastern Country Store at 742 Bay St. demanding money, said Staff Sgt. Glen McCloskey.

    He was armed, said McCloskey, declining to reveal the type of weapon involved.

    The man fled on foot with an undisclosed amount of money.

    But a man was arrested about 2 p.m. and is scheduled to appear in court today to face charges of armed robbery, he said.

    On Saturday, about 10:35 p.m., two men wearing balaclavas entered Jim Bob's Variety at 1059 Manawagonish Rd., demanding money.

    One man was armed, said McCloskey, again declining to reveal the type of weapon.

    The men fled on foot with an undisclosed amount of money.

    The major crime unit is investigating.

    ========

    Gunfire wounds girl, 14, in leg
    Police investigate two late-night shooting incidents in Dartmouth
     

    Halifax police are investigating the shooting of a 14-year-old Lower Sackville girl in the Westphal area of Dartmouth and gunshots in the woods behind a Dartmouth apartment building overnight Saturday.

    The girl was brought in to the IWK Health Centre in Halifax at 1:30 a.m. Sunday with a gunshot wound to her leg, Staff Sgt. James Perrin said Sunday. She was not taken there by ambulance.

    The teen was in stable condition in the hospital Sunday and it was not known when she would be released. Her injury is not considered life-threatening.

    Police were hoping to interview her Sunday afternoon, Staff Sgt. Perrin said.

    Police believe there is no connection between the girl’s shooting and an investigation into shots being fired at 15 Kennedy Dr. in Dartmouth.

    "At this point, there is no evidence to support they are linked," said Staff Sgt. Perrin.

    Police said preliminary reports indicate the girl was shot in Dartmouth but that has not been confirmed.

    At 11 p.m. Saturday, Halifax police responded to the wooded area behind an apartment building at 15 Kennedy Dr. after a complaint about gunshots in the area.

    When officers arrived, they also heard shots and several members, along with the K-9 unit, searched the area and found two intoxicated men hiding in the woods. The two men, who were arrested for public intoxication, were questioned Sunday morning and later released.

    Police found two firearms in a ground search at the scene, Staff Sgt. Perrin said.

    He said there appears to be no connection between the two men and the guns found Sunday morning.

    "The investigation remains open," said Staff Sgt. Perrin, adding officers talked to residents in nearby buildings looking for information on what had taken place.

    Shawn Simms, who lives next door to 15 Kennedy Dr., heard the gunshots and was anxious Sunday morning to find out about them.

    He was watching a movie with his wife in their apartment Saturday night when he heard the shots ring out.

    "I know the difference between firecrackers and gunshots," said the carpenter. "It sounded like two guns were involved. The first two shots sounded like they were from a shotgun and then another four or five shots from a handgun."

    On Sunday morning, Mr. Simms was outside leaning over a chain-link fence watching police conduct a ground search behind the apartment building at 15 Kennedy Dr.

    He said the police arrived at the building Saturday night and took two men into custody from woods nearby.

    "I heard one of the guys singing and whistling when he was taken away," said Mr. Simms.

    A police officer remained at the scene in his car all night, he said.

    On Sunday morning, police placed yellow tape around the back of the apartment building’s playground area where there are swings and broken picnic tables, while the K-9 unit and forensics officers searched the area for several hours.

     




    Police investigate the area around 15 Kennedy Dr. in Dartmouth after the discovery of two firearms early Sunday morning. 




    Police investigate the area around 15 Kennedy Dr. in Dartmouth after the discovery of two firearms early Sunday morning.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


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    Quick-thinking interrupts attempted theft

    Two Halifax men made the jobs of a few police officers a little easier Sunday afternoon after an attempted theft at an apartment building.

    A tenant at 1881 Brunswick St. called the superintendent after hearing someone in the building’s storage room at about 1 p.m. The superintendent caught a 46-year-old man trying to steal tools. He and the tenant told the man, who said he was looking for a bathroom, to stay where he was and the man obeyed.

    Halifax police, who arrived a short time later, said they found a garbage bag on the room’s floor filled with a number of items.

    The man is facing breaking and entering charges.

    ==

    Murder probe stalled
    Police still seek witness 7 years after Jason

    Halifax police continue to be frustrated by the mysterious murder of Jason MacCullough in a Dartmouth park seven years ago today.

    "Investigators are convinced that there were a number of people in the area and (they) believe a number of people witnessed what happened," Const. Jeff Carr of Halifax Regional Police said in an interview on the eve of the anniversary of Mr. MacCullough’s death. "That’s the part of this case that does not sit well with us more than anything."

    Const. Carr said investigators are hoping someone will come forward with information about the murder that will allow police to take the investigation to "the next level."

    Officers found the body of Mr. MacCullough on Aug. 28, 1999, at about 2:30 a.m. on a paved path between 100 and 104 Pinecrest Drive. Police believe the 19-year-old, who did not live in the immediate area, was shot in the back of the head at close range while apparently taking a shortcut between buildings.

    Police said there was no indication the victim had been involved in any type of criminal activity.

    Over the years, the police have sought the public’s help by releasing composite drawings of men they believe may know something about the killing.

    In 2001, Halifax Regional Municipality offered a $25,000 reward for information that could lead to the arrest of the killer. The offer was open for one month but led to no arrests.

    To date, no one has ever been charged in Mr. MacCullough’s death.

    Members of his family did not want to discuss the case Sunday.

    Police urge anyone with information about the case to come forward by calling 490-5333.

    =======

    Police seize WWII-era weapons

    KOMARNO, MAN. -- Fifty Second-World-War-era submachine guns seized since January were allegedly rebuilt in a clandestine gun shop in Komarno, Man. and then sold to gangs connected to the Hells Angels, police said Friday.

    Sten submachine guns were decommissioned by the Canadian Forces in the 1970s, but are being reconditioned and sold to drug gangs, police said.

    "They were actually trafficking in them," said Sergeant Rick Guyader of the Winnipeg Police Service's organized crime unit. "I'm sure if we could trace the whole system, we'd find them across the country."

    RCMP and city police put 19 of the guns on display Friday along with rifles, shotguns and ammunition seized earlier this month in huge police raids at two properties in Komarno, about 70 kilometres north of Winnipeg.

     Police also seized two working cannons, a homemade .50-calibre rifle and three solid-steel pen guns -- homemade guns disguised as ballpoint pens. The guns fire a single .22-calibre bullet for what one officer described as "up close and personal killing."

    Elwyn Evans, 61, and Alvin Luprypra, 52, remain in custody charged with multiple firearm offences.
    ====

    Quebec man home to face questions about killings

     August , 2006

    Quebec — A 56-year-old man is back in Quebec after returning from Switzerland with a police escort.

    While in police custody in Geneva, Gérald Gallant admitted to a series of homicides for the Hells Angels biker gang.

    Quebec police say they want to speak to him about one murder.

    Quebec provincial police officers accompanied Mr. Gallant on a flight to Quebec City on Monday.

    ===

    Canadian counterfeit DVD manufacturer busted in Toronto

    TORONTO — Toronto police say they have broken what's believed to be the largest counterfeit DVD manufacturing ring in Canada.

    Police raided three east-end offices over the weekend and say they seized 20,000 counterfeit DVDs worth $400,000.

    Police say the manufacturing operation was sophisticated and had the capacity to make 560 DVDs an hour.

    They say it's the largest known manufacturing lab in Canada.

     Three Toronto women in their 20s and a 36-year-old Markham man are charged with various offences including possession of property obtained by crime.

    An arrest warrant has also been issued for a 25-year-old Markham woman.

    ===

    In shopping for terror, Canada seems to be the place


    TORONTO — Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day denounced Hezbollah yesterday as "one of the most vicious murderous groups in the world today." A few days ago, he lauded police officials for scooping up Canadian suspects "who allegedly conspired to procure weapons on behalf of the Tamil Tigers."

    But while Mr. Day talks the talk of an anti-terrorism crusader, Canada remains a latecomer in taking legal action against alleged domestic supporters of foreign terrorist organizations. In fact, while security agencies here have been spying on suspected local operatives of Hezbollah and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam since at least the early 1990s, they haven't been able to convert those operations into criminal prosecutions.

    More frequently, investigations of Canadian operatives have tended to spawn criminal prosecutions in the United States, where supporting terrorist groups is a more clear-cut crime, and has been for years.

    "The U.S. has much more stringent laws," said Ed Morgan, a University of Toronto law professor and president of the Canadian Jewish Congress. "I don't think our legislation is quite as specific."


     On the surface, Hezbollah and the Tamil Tigers share little in common beyond being notorious for pioneering suicide bombings in the 1980s. But when Shia fighters from south Lebanon want night-vision goggles, or when guerrillas in Sri Lanka want the latest global-positioning circuitry, security sources believe they often go shopping in the same place: Canada.

    Although the shopping sprees have been picked up on by Canadian agents, the results have been more useful to U.S. prosecutors than to Canadian ones.

    Tamil Tiger "co-conspirators attempted to purchase night-vision goggles from a company in British Columbia," reads one part of a new criminal complaint unsealed last week against more than a dozen suspects, many of them Canadians. The Ontario-based suspects also allegedly sought high-end GPS circuit boards, radio towers, assault rifles, missile launchers, even warship-design software from a variety of jurisdictions.

    The FBI-intercepted conversations alluded to in the case, which is being prosecuted in New York, bear a striking resemblance to similar ones involving Hezbollah that Canadian spies picked up years ago. "There was a store in Alberta and one here," says one Vancouver Hezbollah suspect who was later accused of trying to buy $60,000 worth of night-vision goggles and GPS circuitry. He then stated that he "preferred that the items be purchased in Alberta, to save paying taxes."

    Those conversations were overheard and chronicled at length by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. But they have never been presented in a Canadian criminal court. (The CSIS mandate largely prevents the spy agency from presenting its intelligence as evidence in Canadian criminal proceedings.)

    Yet the CSIS intercepts proved crucial to American prosecutors, who persuaded the spy agency that there was no barrier to its agents giving evidence in the United States. The information has been used to secure several lengthy convictions of Hezbollah operatives, while prosecutors in several states are still seeking to convict 20 other Hezbollah sympathizers on charges of being part of a wider racketeering conspiracy. Several Canadians, including ones considered fugitives by the United States, are named in the indictment.

    A crucial difference between Canada and the United States is when Hezbollah and the Tamil Tigers were officially listed as terrorist organizations. The United States outlawed Hezbollah and the Tigers in 1997. Ottawa outlawed Hezbollah in 2002 and the Tigers this year.

    Some critics of Canada's record point out that refugees from war-torn Sri Lanka and Lebanon make up a proportionately greater contingent of Canada's population, giving them a greater political voice. Canada's Liberal Party long resisted calls to declare the Tamil Tigers a terrorist group, but the Conservatives quickly moved to outlaw the group after the party took power this winter.

    Just days after that blacklisting, the RCMP raided offices in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver associated with an alleged Tamil Tiger front organization, the World Tamil Movement. No charges have been brought.

    While the U.S. Justice Department has boasted of launching 400 "terrorism-related" cases since 2001 -- many of them, it should be pointed out, for low-level infractions such as visa fraud -- Canada has been far more discriminating about its application of its laws.

    The Department of Justice even cautions on its website that terrorism "investigations are often complex, and require several years of work before criminal charges are laid." In fact, Ottawa's 2001 Antiterrorism Act, which granted the state far wider powers, has been used to lay charges in only two pending criminal cases. Both involve suspects accused of plotting al-Qaeda-inspired attacks against civilians.

    Compared to plotting mass-murder, buying dozens of night-vision goggles for Hezbollah or the Tamil Tigers might seem a minor offence. But such goggles turned out to be crucial for Lebanese fighters this summer, when they resisted Israeli forces and continued to lob rockets into northern Israel. (The night-vision goggles discovered so far appear to have come from Britain, not Canada.)

    Experts caution that Canada's obligation to stop terrorism doesn't begin and end with thwarting bomb plots. "We want to stop acts at a very inchoate stage," Prof. Morgan said.

    He said that although Canadian laws aren't as explicit as U.S. ones banning material support, a successful test case or two could change that.

    "These things do need testing in the courts," he said. "We haven't brought any charges at all, so the courts haven't had a chance to test our legislation."
    ===

     

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  •  08-29-2006, 4:34 AM

    Crime Beat--2006/08/29

     





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    2006/08/29

     

     

    Saint John Police believe city bank robber has pulled two jobs in Moncton%]-->


     

    Above is a photo taken from a security camera at the Scotiabank on Main Street in the North End by the man who robbed the bank on Aug. 15. At right is a photo taken at a CIBC bank in Moncton of the man who robbed the bank on Friday. Police believe the two individuals are the same person.
    SAINT JOHN - A prediction by Saint John's deputy police chief that a city bank robber would strike again has apparently come true.

    Shortly after a Scotiabank in the North End was robbed Aug. 15, Bill Reid said the thief would continue until caught. He appears to have struck twice in the last four days.

    On Friday a man fitting the description of the Saint John robber slipped a note to a CIBC teller in Moncton demanding money and warning that he had a gun. On Monday a Moncton Bank of Montreal was hit using the same tactics.

    "We are definitely looking into the connection, right now we believe it to be the same person," said Cpl. Mike Gaudet of the Codiac Regional RCMP detachment in Moncton.

    Saint John police have found in the past that if there were two bank robberies in a year, they were committed by the same individual, Reid said after the Saint John robbery earlier this month. "Usually by the third one we would catch them. That's the pattern we have noticed in Saint John."

    Security camera photos of the bank robber in Saint John and Moncton appear to show the same man entering the banks wearing the same black shades and baseball hat, but in Moncton the thief had grown out his facial hair.

    In all three cases the banks were robbed shortly before noon. The robber entered the banks, waited in line with the other customers and passed the teller a note demanding cash and warning of a weapon. In all three instances the robber fled the banks on foot, cash in hand, with no one but the teller knowing the bank had just been robbed.

    No on has been injured and no one at any of the banks has seen a weapon.

    RCMP and the Saint John Police Force are still looking for the robber. They are comparing files and searching for the serial robber.

    "He could be anywhere. If he has done it in Moncton and Saint John, he could be doing it anywhere and could go to Fredericton or anywhere next," Gaudet said. "We aren't even limiting it to this province."

    Gaudet said police are keeping their eye out for armed robber cases across Canada that match the profile or photo of the bank robber.

    Police and RCMP are requesting the public's help in identifying and finding the robber.

    He is described as being a short man with a small build standing at about five-foot-four. He has black hair. He was last seen sporting a short beard, a dark coloured shirt, faded jeans, black sunglasses and a black ball cap with white lettering.

    Anyone with information is asked to call Codiac Regional RCMP at (506) 857-2400, Saint John Police Force at (506) 648-3333 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS(8477).

    ====

     

    Request withdrawn to ban child porn suspect from kids


    Crown tells court there is no legal authority to impose restrictions on accused

     


     
    The Crown prosecutor has withdrawn a request to impose strict conditions on a man charged with possession of child pornography.

    Andrew Roland Libby, 29, of Dieppe, was charged in June with the indictable offence. He was in court yesterday after refusing last month to sign a court undertaking banning him from having contact with children under the age of 14.

    Libby's lawyer had argued the undertaking was far too general.

    At the time, Crown prosecutor Kathryn Gregory said the accused was preparing to move to another part of Dieppe close to three daycare centres. She asked Judge Michael McKee to have the accused sign a court undertaking stating he will have no contact or communication with any child under the age of 14.

    Gregory said the undertaking would contain two exceptions. First, his two young children from his former marriage would be excluded from the order. Secondly, he could have contact with the two young children of his new girlfriend, but he would not be allowed to be alone with them in his residence.

    The street in question was not mentioned in court, but sources say the accused is moving to Verger Court off Amirault Street in Dieppe. There are several daycares and a park in the neighbourhood.

    Yesterday, Gregory withdrew the request to impose restrictions on Libby, saying she could find no authority to do so, since Libby had not previously been under restrictions despite his appearances on the matter.

    "The authority is not there to impose (conditions)," Gregory said, adding she was reluctant in her withdrawal.

    "There does not appear to be a basis for it."

    Also yesterday, Libby's lawyer Meredith Matheson revealed she would ask the court for a publication ban on the matter.

    However, after discussion with Gregory, both lawyers agreed that since Libby has elected trial by judge alone, any request for a publication ban would have to go before the Court of Queen's Bench.

    Libby is set to return to court Jan. 5 for a preliminary inquiry.
    ==


    Man changes plea


     
    MIRAMICHI - One of the men charged in last year's cross-county drug raid has changed his plea to guilty.

    Ronnald Stewart was supposed to stand trial on Thursday on two charges related to Operation Jackpot.

    But, just before the trial began Stewart changed his plea. Stewart pled guilty to production of marijuana. A second charge of possession for the purpose of trafficking was withdrawn by the Crown.

    Stewart is scheduled for sentencing on Oct. 13.

    On April 19, 2005 duel searches were carried out in the Miramichi and St. Stephen areas.

    Police found marijuana grow operations, some of them with high quality super plants, in Miramichi and discovered that the product would be trafficked across the Maritimes. Police also found that pills were being sent from Miramichi to St. Stephen, where they were smuggled across the border into the United States.

    Eighteen Miramichi-area residents face charges, with more people charged in Saint John and Saint Stephen.

    ===

    Saint John man sent to jail on trafficking charges


     
    One of the four members of a city family charged with drug offences last April, following a large police raid in the North End, pleaded guilty Monday.

    Jeff Byers, 41, of Victoria Street was sentenced to 10 months in jail on two charges of possession of OxyContin for the purposes of trafficking and one charge of breaking his curfew while he was waiting for trial.

    Byers was released last May after a few days in jail, on strict conditions that included being inside his home every day between 7 p.m. and 6 a.m. On Saturday, when police checked up on him around 9 p.m. he was not at home, so he was arrested for breaking his curfew whern they found him.

    Byers was awaiting trial on two charges of possession of OxyContin for the purposes of trafficking - one dating from April, 7 and the other from April 28.

    On Monday, Byers re-elected trial in provincial court and pleaded guilty to everything.

    His sister Margie, 36, brother Peter, 44 and mother Joan, 68, are still waiting to set preliminary inquiry dates on charges of conspiring to traffic in drugs. Lawyers for the three are scheduled to hold a focus hearing on Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. to help identify the issues to be presented at the inquiry.

    Last April 7 police had information from wire taps and other sources that Jeff Byers was selling OxyContin, said Nicole Poirier, a special prosecutor from Fredericton. They stopped his car on Spruce Lake Road and found two bottles with more than 60 pills, worth $3,500 on the street.

    The second charge arose from a search of his home with a warrant on April 28 when 25 pills were found. Conversations recorded a few days before the raid showed he was intending to sell them, said Poirier.

    David Kelly, Jeff Byers' lawyer, said his client had a prescription for OxyContin because he does not have a knee cap, but started to sell the pills to make ends meet when he was cut off social assistance.

    The judge said if Byers had gone through a trial and been found guilty he would have been facing a minimum of two years. He gave him four months each on the trafficking charges and two months consecutive on the curfew violation.
    ====

     

    Court documents point police in man's direction

     


    A 30-year-old Saint John man released from custody last week is being sought by authorities in Fredericton.

    A court document left at the scene of a robbery has prompted police to release a photo and detailed description of Jeffrey James Stone.

    He has been identified by police as a suspect in approximately 11 daytime residential break and enters in Fredericton.

    He resides in Saint John but visits Fredericton on a regular basis.

    Stone appeared in Fredericton provincial court Aug. 23 in custody for committing a break-in the day before. He pleaded guilty to illegally entering a private residence on Smythe Street.

    Sentencing was set over to Oct. 17 to allow for the preparation of a pre-sentence report and victim-impact statement.

    Stone was released from custody on an undertaking to keep the peace and appear in court as necessary.

    He told the court he was in the area because he's been waiting to begin drug treatment in the local methadone program.

    But Cpl. Martin Gaudet of the Fredericton Police Force said there was a renewed interest in Stone as the result of another break and enter investigation.

    "The homeowner while going through the (house), along with forensic identification and police, found a piece of paper, which was later identified as the court undertaking from Mr. Stone - that he had just signed that day," Gaudet said. "Therefore, he is a strong suspect in that break, obviously."

    Stone is described as white, 175 cm (5'8"), 64 kg (145 lbs) with dark hair and blue eyes. He walks with a distinct limp and has several tattoos.

    A warrant of arrest has been issued for Stone in connection with a break and enter and breach of a court undertaking.

    Anyone with information on Stone's whereabouts is asked to contact the Fredericton Police Force at 460-2300 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

    ====

    Nova Scotia ATM Scam 

    BRIDGEWATER — Hundreds of Royal Bank customers were the victims over the weekend of a type of debit-card fraud known as skimming.

    Lori Smith, a spokeswoman for the Royal Bank in Atlantic Canada, said about 350 customers have been affected by the scam, but that not all of them may have had money taken from their accounts. "We do not know how many may actually have lost money," she said.

    The bank is refunding the money of every client who had money taken, but Ms. Smith would not say how much cash is involved.

    She said the banking machines affected by the scheme are in Bridgewater, Mahone Bay, Tantallon and Bedford.

    "We have systems in place to monitor for this all the time," and bank officials were "notified" something was wrong, Ms. Smith said, though she declined to say how bank officials found out about the debit-card scam.

    She said the Royal Bank’s investigation services branch is delving into what happened and is working closely with police.

    Bridgewater’s deputy police chief said the local detachment only became aware of what had happened after a couple of customers and the local radio station called to ask what was going on. Bob Smith said he had an investigator sent to the local branch and was told there had been a case of debit-card fraud at the ATM machine in the Bridgewater Mall.

    "They’re doing their own investigation," the deputy said, and will call in the police if they deem it necessary. "We’re available if they need any assistance," he said. In the meantime, anyone who thinks they may have had their accounts tampered with is asked to contact their local Royal Bank branch.

    Ms. Smith said the bank immediately froze accounts over the weekend, hopefully preventing further thefts, and was busy Monday issuing new debit cards.

    She said there are various forms of skimming devices and could not speculate which type may have been used in this case.

    However, Bridgewater police say they believe a device was used at the local ATM machine to collect customer’s debit-card numbers and that a "considerable amount of money was withdrawn from customers’ accounts."

    Ms. Smith said whoever did this used a device to get information from the magnetic strip on the back of the debit card, but she could not say what information the strip contains.

    Debit-card fraud, is an industry-wide concern, said Ms. Smith, and all banks are working to combat it.

    She has several tips for people using debit cards, including being aware of your surroundings when you’re using it, never writing down or telling anyone your personal identification number, and shielding the keypad when you are using it.

    There have been several recent cases of debit-card fraud in Nova Scotia. In June, an Ontario man was sentenced to two years in jail for a debit-card scam at a New Minas mall.

    Last November, a Dartmouth service station employee was sentenced to two years in jail for trafficking in credit-card data and possession of stolen cards.

    ===

    METRO Halifax IN BRIEF

    Cab driver allegedly sexually assaulted fare

    Police are searching for a taxi driver who allegedly sexually assaulted one of his passengers on the weekend.

    A 50-year-old woman reported the alleged incident to police Monday. The woman said she took a cab home from a downtown Halifax bar at about 9 p.m. Saturday. She said when the taxi arrived at a residence on Russell Street in Halifax, the driver got out of the car, pushed her back into the vehicle and sexually assaulted her in the back seat before driving off.

    The man is described as white, in his 40s, approximately five-foot-10, with a slim build, brown hair and eyes, and was clean shaven. He was wearing glasses, a beige ball cap, a white, long-sleeved collared shirt and black cargo pants.

    The alleged victim said the vehicle was a large, dark-coloured car with a light-coloured leather interior. She could not recall the taxi company.

    Anyone with information is asked to contact police.

    Woman robbed of purse, pushed to the ground

    Two young men mugged a woman and snatched her purse in Halifax on Monday night but she was not seriously injured.

    The woman was walking on Agricola Street near West Street at about 9 p.m. when two black men approached.

    She told police one of the men pushed her to the ground and grabbed her purse. The pair then took off on West Street, travelling east.

    Both assailants are described as in their late teens or early 20s and roughly six-foot-two with slim builds and short black hair. One was wearing a white basketball jersey and a white hat, and the other was dressed in a red basketball jersey and matching red shorts.

    Anyone with information is asked to call police.

    =======

     

    Town turns electronic eye on crime

    The town of Annapolis Royal is going ahead with plans to use security cameras to cut down on vandalism at night in its downtown core.

    Amery Boyer, the town’s chief administrative officer, said in an interview Sunday that three cameras have been purchased from a Halifax security firm to be on silent patrol, especially between midnight and early morning.

    She said crime stats in Annapolis Royal are going down, but officials are still looking at new measures to cut down on petty property crimes.

    "We don’t need more police, she said. "But we have a plan to be crime-free. We can solve what is a problem for a number of people by putting something out there that’s not going to cost a lot.

    The cameras will be used to collect information about possible criminal acts after the fact.

    "They are designed to store data for seven days in case something happens, Ms. Boyer said.

    "We’ll be able to see who was on the streets to identify possible witnesses, or catch somebody in the act, Police Chief Ross Campbell said in an interview.

    The cameras will be used to protect the 136 designated heritage buildings in the town.

    Jim Bickford, an owner of the Bread and Roses Inn, said the cameras may make vandals think twice before damaging someone’s property.

    "It’s like speed radar traps, he said. "The knowledge that they may be being watched can be a deterrent.

    =======

     

    Tamil student club probed
    University reviews Sri Lankan group after arrests linked to Waterloo campus

    A southern Ontario university is auditing its Tamil students' association and reviewing overseas co-op placements, after the arrest of four recent graduates in anti-terrorism raids.

    "We think we need to look at a complete assessment of the records that are available to us," said University of Waterloo spokesman Martin Van Nierop. "This is not about the club per se, it's to determine whether their procedures were okay."

    U.S. and Canadian agents arrested a dozen suspects last week on charges of lending support to an outlawed Sri Lanka-based guerrilla army, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. One of the lead suspects, a 26-year-old recent engineering graduate, allegedly boasted that he was known simply as "Waterloo Suresh" to the top Tamil Tiger leaders in Sri Lanka.

    He and three of his school chums stand accused of actively helping the Tigers in their separatist war against the Sinhalese-dominated government. The suspects allegedly tried to procure global-positioning circuitry, night-vision goggles, assault rifles and missile launchers for LTTE, which is banned as a terrorist entity in North America.


     Publicity surrounding the arrests has disturbed University of Waterloo officials, who say they have been helping police investigate the matter. One police-intercepted e-mail allegedly written by "Waterloo Suresh" details how unnamed "student couriers" were used to smuggle goods into Sri Lanka.

    The suspect, whose real name is Suresh Sriskandarajah, briefly served as president of the university's Tamil Students' Association in 2004. The previous year, he started a charitable Sri Lanka-based enterprise called the Vanni Innovation Group, saying it was backed by the university.

    The University of Waterloo is one Canada's top engineering and computer-science schools, and it actively encourages students to immerse themselves in work placements in Canada and around the world. Officials say any "isolated and small events" revealed through the investigation shouldn't reflect on the "great" contributions made by Tamil students over the years.

    But one Tamil student leader said the university's investigation is certain to have a chilling effect on his community, one that will likely extend far beyond Waterloo, Ont.

    "I think it's incredibly alarming, and it sets a terrible precedent," said Ashwin Balamohan, a vice-president in the University of Toronto's student government.

    Most major universities in Canada have student associations for Sri Lankan Tamils, who have been among the country's top refugee groups for the past 20 years. Children who fled war with their families have grown up in Canada, but continue to carefully watch the conflict back home, often with the help of university groups.

    Mr. Balamohan said most Tamil student groups are not political, and concentrate on organizing "culture shows."

    "There is zero evidence to suggest the LTTE has a presence among student groups at all."

    While some student associations send money to charitable causes in Sri Lanka, Mr. Balamohan said most probably have about $900 in their bank accounts, not the $900,000 that some of the suspects are accused of having in order to buy arms.

    He questioned the need for an audit of an association that has seen dozens of executives over the years. Besides, Mr. Balamohan added, "a university administration doesn't have the expertise or authority to investigate matters of national and international security."

    The University of Waterloo's forensic audit is being supported by its student government, which regulates about 160 student groups on campus. The administration is also promising a "thorough review of policies and procedures regarding overseas placements for students" in its co-op programs.

    The university plans to report publicly on its findings when they are complete.

    Other suspects tied to the university include Ramanan Mylvaganam, 30, Thirukumaran Sivasubramaniam, 27, and Thirukumaran Sinnathamby, 27. Some of them also served on the University of Waterloo Tamil Students' Association.

    =======

     

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  •  09-02-2006, 6:41 AM

    Crime Beat 2006/09/02

     





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    2006/09/02

     

    Disgraced teacher gets 6 months in jail


    A disgraced high school teacher and department head who carried on a 10-month sexual relationship with a student at his school has been sentenced to six months in jail for sexual exploitation of a young person.

    Christopher Andre Cassidy, now 37, was charged by Codiac Regional RCMP with exploiting the girl between October 2004 and August 2005, when she was 16 and 17.

    While the age of sexual consent in Canada is 14, the key to this case is that Cassidy, while not her teacher during the time of the offence, was in a position of trust over the victim. He was a teacher at the same school as the student and had been her teacher earlier, when she was in Grade 9, helped her with her math during the time of the offence and coached her sports team for a short time.

    Cassidy greeted the sentence without emotion, turned and smiled at his parents to say goodbye and was escorted out of Court of Queen's Bench in handcuffs.

    Given his opportunity to address the court prior to sentencing, Cassidy did not apologize for his crime, though he did apologize for the troubles it caused the victim - whose name is protected by a publication ban - her family, his own family and the teaching community.

    He lashed out at the media for sensationalizing the crime and, he said, exaggerating the circumstances while praising the victim as "an incredible person" who "helped me keep my head above water."

    That lack of a show of remorse proved a factor in Madame Justice Brigitte Robichaud's sentence. Defence lawyer James Matheson had argued for a conditional sentence to be served in the community while Crown prosecutor William Richards contended a jail term of 10 to 12 months was appropriate.

    The fact that Cassidy had pleaded guilty in July to breaching a court order to stay away from the victim while he was allowed to remain free prior to sentencing was never brought up, likely because that offence occurred after the original exploitation crime and thus it is not deemed a prior offence.

    In that instance, Cassidy was caught by police at a teen dance speaking to the girl and was released from jail only after serving the equivalent of a 16-day jail sentence.

    Cassidy remained stoic throughout the sentencing, which took more than two hours. The only time he lost his composure was when the court discussed his pre-sentence report which hailed his teaching prowess as being such that his peers, superiors and students all admired him. At that point he began to cry in the prisoners' dock.

    Cassidy was fired from his job in July. His union won't say if he has grieved the firing but says if a grievance has been filed it will become public in due course. The Department of Education won't say, citing privacy laws, whether Cassidy's principal's certificate has been yanked. However, it has said that the department has been consistent in the past and yanked the teacher's certificate of any teacher convicted of a sexual offence.

    Both the Crown and defence agreed on a sentence for Cassidy of between 10 and 12 months, however the defence argued the objectives of sentencing could be met with a sentence served in the community - typically including tight restrictions such as house arrest - while the Crown said only jail would suffice.

    Had he received a conditional sentence, Cassidy would have been one of the last Canadians to receive such a sentence for the crime of sexual exploitation of a young person because Parliament has since imposed a mandatory minimum jail sentence of 45 days for the crime, which is now punishable by up to 10 years in federal penitentiary. Crimes with a minimum sentence aren't eligible for a conditional sentence.

    Even under the old provisions of the Criminal Code of Canada under which Cassidy was charged, the crime is punishable by up to five years, but maximum sentences are reserved for the very worst cases.

    Both the Crown and defence supplied the judge with ample examples of cases of sentences in other, similar, cases backing their own submissions. It was a tough sentencing job for the court, on a crime in which the victim says in her victim-impact statement she is not a victim and, in fact, testified during Cassidy's jury trial that she is still in love with her former teacher.

    Robichaud found as aggravating factors Cassidy's lack of acceptance of responsibility for his crime, his lack of remorse, the abuse of his trust position, the long period over which the crime occurred and how Cassidy accompanied the teen to bars, though there was no evidence alcohol played a role in the offence.

    Mitigating factors were the lack of force or violence, the offence wasn't predatory in nature, the accused has long since embarked on a course of counselling and therapy of his own volition, his career is in tatters, he has no criminal history and he helps parent his three children. Cassidy is separated from his wife. At trial, he cited marital unhappiness and depression as two factors he was under at the time of the offence.

    However, the judge said a teacher who carries on a relationship with a student at his school who confesses a crush for him, even if she was only his student in the past, "must be punished, and punished severely."

    "Teachers and other such authoritative figures must ensure that crushes ... are not nurtured but rather are discouraged and stalled at the outset," Robichaud said.

    In a case full of twists, two more somewhat odd turns were saved for the last. The defence argued that if Cassidy was to be sentenced to jail, then it should be for no less than 12 months. Most often a defence lawyer will argue for a sentence less than what the Crown proposes, rarely, if ever, more. However, the defence tactic was so that Cassidy might serve his sentence other than in the Moncton Detention Centre and in a facility that would make continuation of his counselling and psychiatric treatment easier.

    That was not a good enough reason for the judge, who nevertheless did include a recommendation to jailers that every effort be made to facilitate Cassidy's continuing treatment.

    And in a final twist, the judge refused to issue a no-contact order to keep Cassidy away from the victim. She ruled that way because the Crown was unable to show her case law or statutes allowing her to impose such a condition, and she also noted the victim is now 18 and, presumably though the judge didn't explicitly say so, is now the master of her own actions at that age.

    The Crown had sought the no-contact order arguing that, as a victim of exploitation, it might be helpful for her to have a period of time away from the accused.

    During the 12 months of probation, Cassidy must also be of good behaviour; report to the court or to his probation officer when required; advise the court or his probation officer if he should either find a new job, change his name or change his address; and seek permission to leave the province.

    His name will be on the national registry of sex offenders for 10 years and he must provide a sample of his DNA for the national criminal databank.

    The judge also imposed a $100 victim fine surcharge.

     
    Chris Cassidy is taken into custody yesterday after being sentenced at Court of Queen's Bench in Moncton to six months in jail for sexual exploitation of a young person

    ========
     
     
     
    Cops ask for help finding man with several arrest warrants

    %]-->
     

    SIVRET
    The Fredericton Police Force is seeking the public's assistance in locating a wanted individual.

    Arrest warrants exist for Edmond Joseph Sivret. The 30-year-old is described as Caucasian, six feet tall and weighs about 221 pounds.

    He has brown hair, blue eyes and often sports a brown moustache and goatee.

    Sivret is wanted on numerous crimes, including assault with a weapon, break and enter with violence, failure to appear in court and breach of court orders.

    Anyone with information on Sivret's location is asked to contact police at 460-2300 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477.

    ========
    Courts | briefly

    %]-->
    Memorabilia collector charged with bilking bank

    Fredericton's one-time czar of sports and pop-culture collectibles is facing fraud charges in provincial court.

    Jason Todd Bobbitt, 34, formerly of Fredericton is charged by the RCMP's commercial-crime unit with two indictable counts of fraud.

    He's accused of defrauding various individuals of a sum of money exceeding $5,000 and of defrauding the Bank of Nova Scotia, also of a sum in excess of $5,000.

    Also charged with the same two counts is Bobbitt's now-defunct EBay business, Crazy Canuck Ltd.

    The first charge is believed to relate to online collectibles transactions over EBay.

    Bobbitt has yet to elect mode of trial or enter pleas to the charges. Defence lawyer Randy Maillet asked Friday that the case for set over for two months to allow him to get through the files disclosed by the Crown prosecutor's office.

    Bobbitt was not in court Friday. Maillet said his client is living in British Columbia.

    The case was adjourned until Oct. 25 for election and plea.

    Bobbitt built up a significant business and clientele on EBay years ago. Business was so good, he opened two storefronts: one downtown on York Street and one in the Fredericton Mall.

    Crazy Canuck also expanded beyond sports collectibles and memorabilia and started to offer pop-culture collectibles.

    Bobbitt made headlines in New Brunswick when he bought four torches used by contestants from the second, third and fourth seasons of Survivor.

    Bobbitt also sponsored local hockey teams before his business folded.

    Rusagonis man pleads guilty to lesser charge

    A Rusagonis man facing a drug trafficking related charge pleaded guilty to a lesser offence after a judge denied his request for bail Friday.

    Nicholas Adam Parrott, 21, of 18 Balsam Dr. was charged with Aug. 27 counts of possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking and breach of a court undertaking.


    Shortly thereafter, Parrott pleaded guilty to the lesser, included offence of indictable possession of pot for personal use, as well as to the breach of the undertaking.

    Crown prosecutor William Corby said a police officer noticed a suspicious vehicle in the Vanier Industrial Park around 6 p.m. last Sunday.

    When the officer approached the car, Corby said, the two occupants - one of who was Parrott - rolled down the windows.

    "A lot of smoke came out of the car," the prosecutor said.

    That led to a search, and two bags of marijuana - one containing 29 grams of pot, the other had 22 grams - were found.

    Corby said Parrott is awaiting trial in late September on another drug charge and he'd been released pending trial on the undertaking he violated.

    Violating that order called for a 30-day jail sentence, the prosecutor argued.

    Nicholas imposed a 30-day jail sentence for the offences.
    =====
     
     
    Dilaudid addict who went on crime spree gets house arrest

    %]-->
     

    A Dilaudid addict who went on a crime spree in the spring and summer to feed her habit was granted a conditional sentence of house arrest in provincial court Friday.

    Juanita Starr Smith, 27, of Kingsclear First Nation was in court to be sentenced for five counts of uttering forged documents, five counts of probation violation and one count each of break and enter, theft and assaulting a police officer.

    Crown prosecutor Trent Wilson said police received a report in May from Kingsclear First Nation band councillor Mike Solomon - Smith's stepfather - that there was a problem with some cheques belonging to the reserve.

    "He said that cheques were being bounced all over the city," Wilson said.

    He reported that the cheques had been stolen out of his truck in February but he hadn't noticed until later when bad, authorized cheques - made out to Smith - were showing up.

    Smith had taken the cheques and had cashed five of them at various businesses in Fredericton in April.

    "She apparently needed money for drugs," Wilson said. "While this spree was taking place, she was on probation."

    Smith was also caught May 10 in a bungled attempt to steal four Star Trek DVD box sets, valued at a total of $474.52, from Wal-Mart.

    Wilson said she was observed putting the DVDs in a backpack and left the store without trying to pay for them. She was stopped by store security.

    "She cut herself while doing this. There was blood smeared on the boxes," the prosecutor said.

    Smith advised the security officers that she had hepatitis C as a result of sharing a needle for drug use.

    She also admitted to police that she broke into a room at the Airport Motel, where she had been staying with a friend.

    Wilson said a briefcase in the room had been forced open, but nothing was taken.

    Smith was also arrested after a brief high-speed chase on Aug. 2. Wilson said she was unco-operative and combative after the arrest.

    "She appeared to be under the influence of narcotics at the time," he said.

    After she was placed in a cell at city police headquarters in the early-morning hours of Aug. 3, Wilson said, she spit on the arresting officer, which constituted the assault charge.

    It's clear that Smith has a severe drug addiction, he said, one that's cost her the custody of her three children.

    "The past six or eight months have been difficult for her and her family," Wilson said.

    "A friend introduced her to Dilaudid last year. With friends like that, your honour, who needs enemies?"

    Wilson said Smith's past criminal history is limited, but he argued a strong punishment was in order.

    "Certainly, the Crown's position is that she needs to go to jail," he said.

    "Her conduct with the police officer was despicable, to say the least."

    Defence lawyer Edward Derrah said Smith is ready to turn her life around.

    "There's no question Miss Smith hit bottom," he said.

    He pointed out that her wish to turn over a new leaf isn't just jailhouse conversation. She has sought detox treatment before and has inquired about signing up for a drug rehab program.

    Derrah requested that a conditional sentence of house arrest be imposed instead of straight jail time.

    "I'd just like to say I'm very sorry, to my father especially," Smith told the court. "I wasn't always this messed up."

    Information about the Rising Sun drug treatment program in Eel Ground was faxed to the court. It advised there were openings later this month for which Smith could qualify.

    Solomon told the court he was willing to take Smith back in and help her get her life back together.

    Judge Graydon Nicholas ruled a conditional sentence was in order so Smith could get the help she needs to fight her addiction.

    "In my opinion, this individual does need strong rehabilitation," he said.

    He placed her on house arrest for one year.

    During that time, she can only leave her stepfather's home for treatment, counselling, medical appointments, emergencies, worship, work, education, community service time and five hours of personal time each week, pre-arranged with her supervisor.

    She must also abstain from alcohol and non-prescribed drugs and perform 100 hours of community service work.

    After her house arrest, Smith will be on probation for 18 months, during which she must continue her counselling as recommended and pay $894 in restitution to Money Mart on Main Street.

    =========
    Nova Scotia

    Advocate: 90 days slap on wrist for voyeur, slap in face for victims

     AMHERST — The 90-day sentence proposed for a man who filmed a little girl through her bathroom window is a slap in the face for victims, says a New Brunswick woman who crusaded to have voyeurism made a crime.


    "It isn’t what I fought 10 years for and it won’t send a message of deterrence to those who might want to do a similar thing," Julia Buote of Riverview said in a telephone interview Thursday.

    "For the Crown prosecutor to indicate it was on the low end of the scale because the young victim wasn’t touched but only videoed upset me greatly. The voyeurism law was put into effect last November to close a loophole that was letting people get away with an assault that takes place when they are photographed against their knowledge and no touching happens."

    Ms. Buote made the comments two days after Winston Charles Patriquin, 33, of Port Howe pleaded guilty in Amherst provincial court to one count of voyeurism and another count of making child pornography. He stood on a ladder outside a home to videotape a girl under the age of ten taking a shower.

    Mr. Patriquin is the first person in Canada to be convicted under the law.

    Crown attorney Craig Botterill told the media outside court that he and defence lawyer Pat Duncan would be suggesting the 90-day jail term when sentencing takes place on Sept. 28. The Crown will also recommend that he get intensive treatment and counselling and have his name and DNA added to the Canadian sex offender registry.

    The New Brunswick woman began fighting to have voyeurism included in the Criminal Code of Canada in 1996, two years after her 17-year-old daughter was victimized by a voyeur.

    "My ex-husband videoed her in the bathtub with a concealed camera," Ms. Buote said. "After I found out what he’d done, I went to the RCMP to lay charges. I spent two hours with the RCMP going over the Criminal Code," said Ms. Buote. "But because he’d only photographed her and not touched her, they told me there was nothing in the code that he could be charged with. The RCMP even sent the information to the Crown prosecutor and he came to the same conclusion."

    Their decision stunned Ms. Buote, who felt the clandestine videotaping had violated her daughter to the same degree as if she had been touched during a sexual assault. After agonizing about what to do to prevent it from happening to others, she decided that she had to fight to get voyeurism included in the Criminal Code.

    Over the years, her battle included sending dozens of letters and making numerous phone calls to her member of Parliament and to three federal justice ministers. An entry in Hansard, the official record of parliamentary debates, shows a former New Brunswick MP advocated on Ms. Buote’s behalf.

    The woman has been on a crusade, "not only on behalf of the injustice that occurred with respect to her own daughter, but to ensure that this invasion of privacy in a very personal way would never happen again," said John Herron, who used to be the Conservative MP for Fundy-Royal.

    He said she contacted him shortly after being elected in 1997.

    Ultimately, in March 2005, Ms. Buote appeared before the federal justice committee in Ottawa. There she outlined her reasons for wanting voyeurism placed in the Criminal Code.

    "Even though there is no touching, voyeurism is a devastating crime that has long-term effects on its victims," Ms. Buote said. "To this day, neither me nor my daughter can go into a public washroom or try on clothes in stores because we’re afraid a camera could be there. We could never videotape family events. The fear of being videotaped without your knowledge never seems to go away.

    "I was very happy when the law was enacted last November. But I just couldn’t believe the sentence Mr. Botterill said he was going to recommend in the Patriquin case. Ninety days just isn’t enough. That little girl won’t be over the effects of being videotaped by him in 90 days. She will always be afraid of windows for fear that someone is on the other side videotaping her."

    She suggests two years would be more appropriate. "That would have sent a message of deterrence to him and others who are thinking about doing something similar."

    Ms. Buote is also concerned about the terms of Mr. Patriquin’s release pending sentencing. "I couldn’t believe they ordered him to refrain from possessing firearms but said nothing about possessing video equipment. I sure hope it’s there when he is finally sentenced because, as it is now, he can still use video equipment to build up his collection."

    However, she is thankful for one thing. "Because that little girl is a victim of a crime, she will have access to counselling through victim services. That wasn’t available to my daughter or my family when it happened to us because back then it wasn’t a crime."

    =========


    More shots fired in Dartmouth

    For the second time in a week, Halifax Regional Police rushed to a Dartmouth apartment building after reports of late-night gunshots.

    After arriving at 15 Kennedy Dr., an eight-storey, blue and grey building in Westphal, police heard from witnesses that four to six shots rang out just before 2:30 a.m. Wednesday and a big, black vehicle with shiny rims sped off afterwards.

    In the parking lot, police found a Nissan Maxima with bullet holes and a broken window in an adjacent, occupied apartment.

    "We believe that a shot deflected from the Maxima and went through the apartment window," police spokesman Const. Jeff Carr said Thursday. No one was hurt.

    Const. Carr said police spoke with the Nissan’s owner, but didn’t make any progress on the investigation that way. Officers also spoke to others in the area who heard the shots and witnessed some of the activity, he said.

    Police will look into the possibility the shootings are related to some incidents in the area over the weekend, he said.

    Around 11 p.m. Saturday, police heard reports of gunfire and arrested two drunk men in woods behind the building and found two firearms afterwards. A little over two hours later, at 1:30 a.m., police heard someone had driven a 14-year-old girl with gunshot wounds to her leg to the IWK Health Centre in Halifax.

    Police haven’t been able to confirm if those incidents are related.

    Several residents of 15 Kennedy Dr. refused to speak about the issue Thursday morning. But one young woman who wouldn’t give her name, said she wasn’t afraid to move in with her son.

    "Nothing happens without a reason. People just don’t run around doing stuff like that for no reason. It probably started somewhere else and just finished here."

    ===

    =======

     

    PROVINCE IN BRIEF

     

    Shelburne man charged with attempted murder

     

    SHELBURNE — A Sable River, Shelburne County, man has been charged with attempted murder.

    Orin Brenton Dash, 33, also appeared in Shelburne provincial court Wednesday on charges of assault causing bodily harm and aggravated assault.

    The charges are in connection with a domestic dispute Aug. 9 in Sable River. A female victim received a gash on her head during the dispute.

    Mr. Dash is scheduled to enter a plea in court Oct. 4.


    Dartmouth man arrested for child pornography


    A 21-year-old Dartmouth man was arrested on child pornography charges Wednesday.

    The Halifax Regional Police/RCMP Internet child exploitation unit executed a search warrant at a Braemar Drive address at 8:15 p.m. and arrested a suspect without incident. He will appear in court at a later date.

    ====

    Six arrested in drug sting that also nets guns, cash

    Operation Impetus, based on Spring Garden Road, took month to complete
     


    HALIFAX - A month-long undercover operation aimed at street-level drug trafficking in the heart of the city has resulted in six arrests and the seizure of a quantity of illegal drugs.

    The police called it Operation Impetus, but for the Spring Garden Road Area Business Association, it's a case of keeping the street safe.

    "It's really the focal point of the city, let's face it," said association manager Bernard Smith. "And when you get a lot of people, you get a lot of activities going on."

    Some of those activities were illegal.

    Merchants were complaining about suspected drug deals going on near their shops and residents were suspicious of activities in the streets and parks just off Spring Garden Road.

    That convinced police to launch a special project to get the drug dealers off what is arguably the busiest street in the city.

    "We're delighted with the support we're getting from the police," said Smith. "We think the police are attuned to the same goals we have."

    The goal in August was to get the dealers off the street.

    After three weeks of gathering information and surveillance, the Halifax Regional Police and Halifax RCMP Drug unit moved in Wednesday night.

    Three men were arrested on Spring Garden Road Wednesday evening. Brandon Simmonds, Andre Simmonds, both 19 and Edward Appleby, 33, face drug trafficking charges.

    Three apartments were searched on Mitchell Street, near Barrington and Inglis streets, resulting in the seizure of crack cocaine, pills, two pellet guns, cash and drug paraphernalia.

    Two women and a man were arrested during the searches and will face a number of charges.

    All of the arrests were made without incident.

    Halifax Regional Police Const. Jeff Carr said the investigation is continuing and there could be more arrests.

    He also said street-level drug dealing isn't a big problem downtown.

    "And this will certainly put a damper on it," he said.

    Smith said merchants and the association are in daily contact with police.

    "(That's) to make sure this is a showcase to the outside world and that there is an appropriate level of safety," he said.
    ===

     

    Swarmings return
     

    HALIFAX - A gang of marauding youths jumped at least five people late Wednesday night in north-end Halifax in a series of random attacks and robberies along North Street.

    Around 11:10 p.m., a man and woman were attacked near the corner of North and Brunswick streets.

    Four male youths - all between the ages of 14 and 18 - approached the couple. Three of the boys attacked the man, punching and kicking him, while the fourth suspect grabbed the woman's purse and necklace.

    All four then fled.

    But they didn't leave the area, and they didn't give up for the night.

    A short time later, a man was walking on Barrington Street near the Angus L. Macdonald Bridge when four youths knocked him to the ground and began pummelling his head. The victim's Walkman and watch were stolen and all four suspects ran from the area. The man was treated at the QEII Health Sciences Centre for head injuries.


    Soon afterwards, a man and a woman were attacked on North and Agricola streets by four youths who grabbed them from behind. The woman's purse was snatched off her shoulder.

    The suspects in all three incidents are described as young black males between the ages of 14 and 18.

    They have slim builds and were wearing dark, baggy clothes. In one incident, one of the youths wore a red ballcap backwards with a lot of hair sticking out from the sides. The other three wore bandanas on their heads.

    One victim in another incident described one of the attackers as wearing black pants, a white T-shirt and a black stocking cap.

    None of the victims was seriously injured, but investigators are worried by the random attacks.

    "It concerns us because of the violence involved," said Halifax Regional Police Const. Jeff Carr.

    Police believe the three incidents were committed by the same quartet of youths.

    And investigators will be looking for similarities with other incidents in the same area.

    "We see spikes of this type of occurrence from time to time," said Carr.


    -

     

    Fighting back could lead to more trouble

    The advice on what to do if you’re swarmed by would-be thieves is rather simple: give it up, and don’t fight back.

    “If someone’s confronted with people who are demanding money from them, we recommend that they comply with the demand,” said Halifax Regional Police spokesman Const. Jeff Carr.

    “We don’t recommend that they fight back because you don’t know what the person’s intentions may be, or the fact that they could possibly have a weapon.”

    And it helps to be aware of your surroundings, he said, and go with your instincts.

    “If you do see someone or a group of people who you feel may be ill-intentioned, try to avoid them,” Carr said.

    “Go to the other side of the street or turn around and walk the other way before you get too close.”

    And even in the frightening course of being robbed, Carr says any type of description that victims can provide to police is always helpful.

    ==


    Five injured, vehicles, property destroyed as driver goes on Coldbrook-to-Kentville rampage


    KENTVILLE — A driver who used a van to go on a rampage through Kings County on Thursday evening injured five people and left a trail of destruction in downtown Kentville.

    When the mayhem was over, Kentville police had arrested Herbert Howard MacDonald, 33, of Kingston, charging him with one count of dangerous driving causing bodily harm and one of leaving the scene of an accident. But Police Chief Mark Mander said more charges are pending against him. The van’s passenger also faces drug and open liquor charges.

    As emergency services workers were left to pick up the pieces, what still remains unanswered is why it happened. But witnesses left to ponder that same question noted an interesting piece of debris at the scene of the final crash — the van’s novelty front licence plant, which read The Devil Made Me Do It.

    Witnesses say the driver of the van tore down Main Street in Kentville just before 7 p.m., setting off a chain-reaction crash that involved six other vehicles.

    Stephanie Martin was working at Beleaf Salon and Spa at the intersection of Church Street when the crash happened.

    "I was behind the desk and we just heard the bang-bang-bang-bang of the cars," she said.

    She jumped up and ran to a large window to see the van sliding toward her. Luckily, the van hit a power pole and ran over a stop sign before skidding to a halt just short of the building.

    "He was coming directly at me. By that time, the pileup had begun," she said.

    Ms. Martin said she called 911, but emergency services workers were already arriving at that point.

    "It was the biggest fright I’ve ever had in my life," she said. "It was so loud."

    She said she saw a man get out of the van and walk away. She later saw police arrest and handcuff that same man at the scene.

    Police said a witness in the west end of town estimated the van was going 100 kilometres an hour when it drove by his house, located in a residential area with a 50 km/h speed limit.

    The van apparently tried to squeeze between a sport utility vehicle and small car on the two-lane, one-way street but struck the rear passenger side of the SUV, Police Chief Mander said.

    The impact tore the back tire off the SUV and the SUV then sideswiped a parked car before crashing into the back of another parked car in front of Lawtons Drug Store. That car was forced into another car, which careened into a pickup truck.

    Meanwhile, the van scraped by the smaller car and skidded in front of it to the opposite side of Main Street, where it finally hit the power pole near the spa. The front driver’s side of the van was demolished and the tire on that side torn away.

    Dozens of bystanders lined the sidewalks behind police tape as paramedics and firefighters tended to a woman and two children who were in the SUV. Paramedics gave teddy bears to the children to calm them. The woman was placed on a stretcher. She, the children and a woman driving the smaller car were taken to Valley Regional Hospital, where they were treated and released.

    The two people in the van were not seriously hurt, police say.

    Black skid marks stretched for half a block to the point of impact and all three vehicles hurtled through a crosswalk that was empty at the time.

    "It’s a miracle that no one died," Chief Mander said.

    Pieces of the vehicles littered the roadway, including part of an axle that was found about 25 metres from the crash site.

    The spectacular crash was the end to a frantic search by police, who had been looking for a suspect who had allegedly been driving erratically on Highway 101 and had allegedly been involved in a Coldbrook hit and run.

    RCMP Cpl. Tracy Vincent said police received calls from motorists about the driver of a van driving dangerously on the highway at Exit 16 in Aylesford. Calls continued coming in from drivers along the highway.

    Cpl. Vincent said the van that crashed in Kentville matched a description of the one seen on the highway. And he said it also matched witness descriptions of a van that collided with a car on the off-ramp at Exit 14 in Coldbrook. The woman driving the car was slightly shaken up in that crash, police said.

    RCMP warned Kentville police to be on the lookout after the hit-and-run incident. But before Kentville police could intercept it, the van had already travelled six kilometres in just a few minutes, arrived in downtown Kentville and crashed.

    Mr. MacDonald was remanded pending a court appearance Tuesday morning.

    Police say drugs and alcohol were not factors in the incident. Officers are still investigating exactly what was behind the erratic driving.


    The driver of this van was arrested Thursday night after setting off a chain-reaction crash in Kentville that involved six other vehicles and sent five people to hospital. ( Valley Bureau)

    ====

    Knife slasher handed 31-month sentence

    A 57-year-old metro area man was sentenced to 31 months in prison Friday for slashing another man with a knife.

    Robert John Barkhouse of no fixed address was convicted Sept. 27 of separate counts of criminal negligence causing bodily harm and possession of a knife for a purpose dangerous to the public following a trial in Halifax provincial court.

    He was found not guilty of three other charges including two additional weapon-related offences and aggravated assault.

    Judge Marc Chisholm sentenced Mr. Barkhouse to 31 months on the assault charge and six months concurrent for the weapon offence.

    The charges stemmed from an altercation at a Halifax rooming house July 5, 2005, during which resident Richard Munro sustained a knife wound to his face.

    Judge Chisholm also ordered Mr. Barkhouse to provide a DNA sample to a national data base and banned him from possessing a firearm for life.

    =======

    Four arrested after pair of street robberies

    Halifax Regional Police arrested three adults and a teenage boy after a pair of street robberies in Dartmouth overnight Thursday.

    The first incident took place near Portland and King streets at about 11:10 p.m. Two young men and a woman were robbed of cash by three young males, one of whom produced a handgun.

    Then at 1 a.m., near Albro Lake and Wyse roads, a 36-year-old woman was assaulted and received non-life-threatening injuries to her head and face after she was knocked to the ground by a man who got out of a car and stole her purse.

    "She was taken to hospital for treatment of injuries and later released," police spokesman Const. Jeff Carr said.

    Afterwards, police pulled over a vehicle on Primrose Street in Dartmouth that matched the description of the one in the second incident. Officers seized an imitation pistol from the car and arrested the occupants.

    All four of the suspects — three young men, aged 17, 18 and 19, and a 21-year-old woman — will face robbery and assault charges. The 19-year-old is from Lake Echo, the rest from Dartmouth. The 17-year-old boy also faces a charge of assault with a weapon in the second incident.

    The four were still in custody late Friday afternoon but were expected to be released on bail after a court appearance later in the day. All four were previously known to police, Const. Carr said.

    Police don’t think the latest robberies are connected to three robberies perpetrated by four young people in north-end Halifax on Wednesday night.

    =========

     

    Charges laid in string of gas bar, store heists

    Halifax Regional Police have charged a Dartmouth man with two dozen criminal offences, including armed robberies of numerous metro area service stations and convenience stores.

    Robert Keith Hawkins, a.k.a. Herbert Hawkins or Christopher MacKinnon, is accused of committing the offences between Aug. 7 and 21.

    The charges against the 27-year-old High Street resident include robbing at least 11 gas stations and convenience stores while armed an equal number of times with a knife, scissors or an imitation of a firearm.

    Mr. Hawkins is also accused of theft and being in possession of a stolen Pontiac Firebird, exceeding $5,000 in value.

    There were no injuries during any of the incidents, police spokesman Const. Jeff Carr said in a news release Friday.

    Police described the robber, who was caught on several store surveillance cameras, as being at least six feet tall, slender, with light facial hair.

    Often he wore a hoodie and a ball cap and was sometimes clean-shaven and other times scruffy, police added.

    Const. Carr said regional police have talked to Codiac RCMP in Moncton where Mr. Barkhouse is currently being held on a host of similar charges stemming from robberies in the New Brunswick city two weeks ago.

    He’s accused of robbing six gas station convenience stores, at least one store twice, in a span of three days.

    Mr. Barkhouse appeared in a Moncton court Wednesday but didn’t enter a plea. He’s being held in custody until his next court appearance on Sept. 7.

    It’s expected he will be dealt with in New Brunswick before being arraigned in a Halifax court on the metro charges. A date for his return to the metro area has yet to be determined.

    ========

    4 arrested, released after bridge torched

    Pictou County RCMP arrested four unidentified adults late Thursday in connection with a fire that destroyed Big Gut Bridge at Pictou Landing earlier that day.

    By late Friday, the RCMP said the four were released and no charges had been laid.

    Investigators say arson caused the fire, which began as a small blaze under an abutment late Wednesday evening. Several fire departments called to the scene were unable to access the bridge’s underside, and it collapsed at about 4 a.m. Thursday. The creosoted timbers continued to burn into the afternoon.

    Traffic between Trenton and Pictou Landing has been rerouted through Chance Harbour Road or Egypt Road, but transportation officials expect a temporary bridge will be in place by Oct. 31.

    Anyone with information about the fire is asked to call their local RCMP detachment, or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS).

    Thieves rob, injure man in Bridgewater

    Police are looking for two young men after a violent armed robbery early Friday morning near Bridgewater Plaza.

    Two men in their early 20s threatened a man with a knife at about 1:15 a.m. and got into a scuffle when the victim didn’t immediately hand over his wallet, Bridgewater Police said. The victim suffered a gash to the head, not caused by the knife, and his wallet was taken. The suspects ran away towards High Street.

    ===
    Border guards get guns
    PM: Canada will hire 400 more officers

    SURREY, B.C. — Canadian border guards will be armed starting in September 2007 but it will take 10 years to fully implement the plan, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Thursday.

    Harper announced at a border crossing south of Vancouver that the federal government will have at least 150 officers with sidearms deployed by the end of March 2008.

    He also reiterated a $101 million promise from the federal budget to hire 400 additional officers. They will be used, among other things, to double up on Canada-U.S. border crossings that only have a single officer on duty.

    "We’re going to take action and get things done," Harper said at the Pacific Highway border crossing south of Cloverdale in the Fraser Valley.

    The Conservatives had indicated earlier this year that they intended to arm border guards, following a number of border incidents in which guards left their posts when they felt threatened by reports of armed fugitives headed their way from the U.S.

    "There have been numerous examples of officers leaving their posts because they simply weren’t equipped to deal with the kind of threat that was anticipated to come over the border," said Harper, who made the announcement accompanied by Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day as they stood outside the busy crossing.

    "We live in a dangerous world and we know there is traffic of dangerous individuals and firearms across the border and this is part of our efforts to deal with that," said the prime minister.

    Harper said the announcement is part of the government’s effort to "tackle crime and protect and Canadians’ way of life."

    Canada now has about 4,400 border guards who have been demanding to be armed to help them deal with cross-border criminal activity.

    George Scott, national vice president of the Customs Excise Union, attended the announcement and sounded satisfied that his members’ wishes were being met.

    "This has been an awful long time coming," said Scott. "It’s very stressful at times."

    Scott, however, said that other union members should also be armed eventually.

    "We want to make sure every officer is armed, not just at marine and land borders. We have a lot of officers undercover who do surveillance."

    In February, officers at four Canada-U.S. border crossings near Vancouver walked off the job Friday over reports of an armed U.S. fugitive headed their way.

    The Peace Arch and Pacific Highway crossings in Surrey, opposite Blaine, Wash., were closed first but the walkout later spread to the Aldergrove and Huntington crossings in the Fraser Valley.

    Supervisors were rushed in to operate a couple of lanes at the Pacific Highway crossing, which caters mainly to commercial truck traffic.

    It was the third such incident at a B.C. crossing this year
    =============

     

    B.C. fugitive arrested in Texas after 24 years

    The 24-year search for a British Columbia man who disappeared after surviving a small-plane crash in a Montana lake that killed his girlfriend has come to an end with his arrest in Texas.

    Jaroslaw Ambrozuk, originally from Burnaby, B.C., was arrested in Dallas on Wednesday on a warrant for negligent homicide in the drowning death of 18-year-old Dianne Babcock on Aug. 22, 1982, U.S. officials said Thursday.

    “It was such a sad, sad thing,” Ms. Babcock's grandmother, Dorothy Babcock, said from her home in Trail, B.C. “She had graduated and had put money down to go in and become a nurse.”

    “She didn't know she was going to die.”

    But Mr. Ambrozuk, who piloted the plane, somehow veered off course into Montana — a diversion that U.S. authorities alleged was intentional.

    “The RCMP tipped us Mr. Ambrozuk had called a friend and told him they had an eloping scheme — that they were going to crash the plane in a lake and were going to disappear and live their life in America,” Flathead County Sheriff Jim Dupont, who was a deputy at the time of the crash, said from Kalispell, Mont.

    A search of the area found evidence of a campfire along the shore. In the burned debris, Mr. Dupont, who has a commercial pilot's licence, recognized aircraft parts.

    Mr. Dupont said Mr. Ambrozuk's behaviour after the crash raised suspicion. Mr. Ambrozuk didn't report the crash or his girlfriend's death to authorities, and he apparently built the campfire to dry off and then vanished, setting off a countrywide manhunt.

    Mr. Dupont said Mr. Ambrozuk called a friend after the crash, saying the plane was at the bottom of Little Bitterroot Lake near Marion, Mont.

    Mr. Ambrozuk told the friend he swam free of the wreckage but he was unable to free Ms. Babcock because her seatbelt was jammed, Mr. Dupont said.

    About a month after the crash, sophisticated underwater equipment provided by a Vancouver man helped police locate the plane in about 70 metres of water.

    “We indeed found the aircraft, and indeed she (Ms. Babcock) was still in it,” said Mr. Dupont, adding that Ms. Babcock's seatbelt wasn't jammed as Mr. Ambrozuk had claimed to his friend.

    Missing from the plane were cash and other items, U.S. authorities said.

    The crash and Mr. Ambrozuk's disappearance were featured twice on the U.S. television program America's Most Wanted.

    “We received hundreds of tips after the show, but none of them led us to his whereabouts,” Mr. Dupont said.

    However, Mr. Ambrozuk continued to make phone calls to a friend in Canada.

    “The calls were taped by the RCMP and the transcripts, more than 75 pages, were handed over to us,” said Flathead County Det. Pat Walsh. “The RCMP put a lot of time into trying to track down this guy.”

    Police traced the calls back to New York, and later to Texas.

    Mr. Ambrozuk had used a phone booth in Dallas which was later staked out by police, but he never went back, Mr. Dupont said.

    Last week, a Texas woman called Mr. Dupont to tell him she believed Mr. Ambrozuk was living in Plano, Texas.

    Mr. Dupont contacted Texas police, and on he received confirmation on Tuesday that the man was indeed Mr. Ambrozuk.

    When he was arrested, Mr. Ambrozuk acknowledged his identity and asked for a lawyer, Mr. Dupont said.

    “I believe he worked for a computer company out of Dallas and assumed another name,” he said.

    Montana will seek to extradite Mr. Ambrozuk on the negligent homicide charge. If he agrees to extradition, he is expected to be in Montana within two weeks. But if he fights it, the process will be delayed for a month or two, Mr. Dupont said.

    The search for Mr. Ambrozuk has taken on personal significance for Mr. Dupont over the past two decades.

    “I am going to retire at the end of this year, and this would have been the only unresolved case in my career,” he said.

     

    ======

    Alleged child pornographers became roommates
    Police say one of the suspects worked at a Bathurst and Lawrence daycare for 10 years

     


    Friday, September 01, 2006


    Toronto police say they have arrested two men who became roommates after meeting online while trading child pornography.

    One of the men who has been charged with possession of child pornography worked at a daycare for 10 years, police said.

    "Not only are they trading online, they're living together," said Detective-Constable Paul Krawczyk of the child exploitation section.

    In early August, undercover officers logged on to the Internet to investigate the distribution of child pornography, Det.-Const. Krawczyk said.

    Officers learned the online moniker and actual name of a man involved and put the information into the Child Exploitation Tracking System.

    The system, launched last year, acts as a searchable database to cross-reference people and evidence.

    A connection was made to two ongoing investigations in other jurisdictions, police said.

    On Aug. 15, police raided a two-bedroom apartment in the Eglinton Avenue and Allen Road area.

    They arrested one man and seized a "large quantity" of child pornography photographs, movies and computer equipment.

    The images and movies were of "mostly boys" and showed children as young as toddlers, Det.-Const. Krawczyk said.

    He said it was one of the largest busts of its kind of the year.

    After further investigation, police took the man's roommate into custody on Tuesday.

    David Miller, 33, has been charged with possessing and copying child pornography.

    David Reeks, 36, has been charged with possessing, distributing and making available child pornography.

    Investigators allege the pair met online about six years ago.

    They became friends, found out that they lived close to each other and decided to move in together, Det.-Const. Krawczyk said.

    He said they have lived together in the apartment for at least a year.

    Mr. Miller worked with children between two and 11 years of age at a Bathurst Street and Lawrence Avenue area daycare from 1989 to 1999. Police would not identify the daycare. Police say Mr. Miller also babysat children in the Toronto area.

    "We just want the parents to be aware of this. Hopefully, we don't find any victims, but we want to have done a thorough investigation," Det.-Const. Krawczyk said.

    He requested that anyone who has had contact with the accused call police.

    Mr. Miller and Mr. Reeks are scheduled to appear in court this morning.

    =====

     

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