Dekg I want to scream : Mother of Neville-Lake children furious as Muzzo moves to minimum security
HALIFAX 鈥?Former soldier Lionel Desmond killed his family and then himself, Nova Scotia RCMP confirmed Friday.Police said an autopsy found that Desmond and three family members died of gunshot wounds, and that his own wound was self-inflicted.It a very unique and tragic and very disturbing case, Cpl. Jennifer Clarke told reporters. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Th
stanley cup e Mounties had previously said gunshot wounds were the suspected cause in the deaths of 33-year-old Desmond, his 31-year-old wife Shanna Desmond, their 10-year-old daughter Aaliyah and his mother Brenda Desmond, 52.The four were found dead Tuesday night in a rural home in Upper Big Tracadie in northeastern Nova Scotia. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Desmond was diagnosed with PTSD after a tour in Afghanistan in 2007, and he apologized for freaking out on friends and family in a social media post last month.Clarke said she could not say when the family died, or anything about the two guns that were found in the house, including what kind they were or who owned them, whether Lionel Desmond was living in the home, or whether police searched any other crime scenes. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW She said investigators cleared the sc
stanley thermosflasche ene Thursday, but the probe continues. A
stanley canada RTICLE CONTINUES BELOW We Nsrp 4 Guelph General Hospital workers test positive for coronavirus
OTTAWA 鈥?Canadians have a largely favourable view of police in their communities but Indigenous people, members of visible minority groups and y
stanley termohrnek ounger Canadians are more likely to have had bad experiences and to feel threatened in the presence of police, a new poll suggests.Seventy-seven per cent of Caucasian respondents to the Angus Reid Institute survey said they had a favourable or very favourable view of their local police.But that dropped to 72 per cent for Indigenous respondents and 67 per cent for those who identified themselves as members of a visible minority. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The contrasts among different age groups was even more stark, with just 51 per cent of 18 to 24-year-olds expressing a favourable view 鈥?a percentage that ros
stanley vaso e through each successive age group to a high of 86 per cent among those 65 or older.Younger Canadians were also far more likely than older Canadians to report having had at least one direct interaction with police over the past five years, which could include anything from a traffic stop or reporting a disturbance to being arrested. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Seventy-four per cent of those aged 18 to 34 reported having had at least one direct interaction with police, compared to 54 per cent for those 55 or older.Among those who did have direct in
stanley tumbler teractions with police, 80 per cent said it was a mainly or entirely positive experience. Seventeen