Message Board Archives
Recent mass shootings in Canada
Barry
2023-10-27 17:02:52
June 10, 2023[66] Ottawa Ontario 0 4 4
July 1, 2023[67] Mississauga Ontario 0 4 4
September 2, 2023[68] Ottawa Ontario 2 6 8
October 23, 2023[69] Sault Ste. Marie Ontario 5[n 1] 1 6
Barry
2023-10-27 17:05:26
Wonder why losers ignore this?
The shooter in Monday night's violent attack in Sault Ste. Marie(opens in a new tab), Ont., had been involved in several prior intimate partner violence investigations, police say.
The 44-year-old male gunman shot and killed four people, including three children(opens in a new tab), in a murder-suicide at two different homes in the northern Ontario community, Sault Ste. Marie Police Service said Tuesday.
A 41-year-old was found deceased at a home on Tancred Street first after a 911 call about someone breaking into the home.
TTO deny you entry
Barry
2023-10-27 17:39:04
When you visit be careful of the many mass shootings
Barry
2023-10-27 17:42:38
22 sh!tting people….sh!t
OTTAWA, March 30 (Reuters) - Officials tasked with reviewing Canada's worst mass shooting called for sweeping police reforms, stricter gun safety regulations and better public communication on Thursday after an investigation found many shortcomings in authorities' response to the 2020 incident.
In April 2020, 51-year-old Gabriel Wortman, disguised in a police uniform and driving a fake police car, shot and killed 22 people in a 13-hour rampage in the Atlantic province of Nova Scotia, before police killed him at a gas station about 90 km (60 miles) from the site of his first killings in Portapique.
That’s a lot of rage
Canada causes rage
Barry
2023-10-27 17:44:03
Dem Mounties is horse sh!t
The commission, which offered 130 recommendations in a report with more than n over 3,000-page report, recommended an external review of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and potentially restructuring the agency, which it said may entail a new approach to federal financial support for provincial and municipal policing services.
Barry
2023-10-27 18:04:49
Let’s examine some of the killers to show the special air they breathe- Archie’s air?
Barry
2023-10-27 18:33:12
How could this be the safest country in the world- no wonder my friend was killed here….
Other incarnations?
Barry
2023-10-27 18:35:22
Dem still investigating?
He say show no video
Barry
2023-10-27 19:07:44
Inept police
Long-simmering tensions with the Toronto police boiled over. Organisers demanded to know why the force hadn’t taken their fears more seriously. Some argued that police were too slow to warn the community of a possible serial killer, saying lives could have been saved.
To make matters worse, Toronto police appeared to put some blame on the gay community for the killings when chief Mark Saunders told reporters that they might have caught McArthur sooner had residents of the gay village been more forthcoming. “We knew that people were missing and we knew we didn’t have the right answers,” Saunders said. “But nobody was coming to us with anything.”
Toronto police had already been banned in 2017 from the Gay Pride parade, following lobbying from Toronto’s chapter of Black Lives Matter. Their request to participate in 2018 was refused.
Note the city
Barry
2023-10-28 00:44:52
Snow, and death…
Barry
2023-10-28 01:34:17
The police in Canada have fake wood decks?
Barry
2023-10-28 09:53:43
This happened right in the man community in the last 2 weeks and he didn’t report it- he talking about fall in the back porch
Police have described the Monday night shootings, that also left the shooter dead, as a tragic case of intimate partner violence.
Aarika Bonin lives down the street from the home where the children -- aged six, seven and 12 -- were found dead and says the entire situation is grim.
Bonin says she and her husband saw police vehicles rushing to the street on Monday night, saw officers running back and forth and paramedics arriving but didn't know what was going on at the time.
She says she didn't know the family personally but the children seemed happy and had decorated their yard recently for Halloween.
Halloween decorations could be seen in the front windows and on the porch of the home where the children were found while police tape surrounded the residence. Two pick-up trucks were parked in the driveway.
Fall in he back porch
Barry
2023-10-28 13:17:53
Snow, snow, snow
Canada did a blow
White on the outside
Dead on the inside
A creepy nation
A creepier prime minister
Why did he divorce his wife?
Alien21 always brings strife
Ask Him about the dead
Or ask his other handles instead….
Incarnations or Satan incarnate?
Barry
2023-10-28 15:39:47
Barry
2023-10-28 15:43:08
Bernardo, 58, along with his wife Karla Homolka, committed a string of sex crimes, rapes and murders across the country in the late 1980s and 1990s. The media dubbed the pair the "Ken and Barbie" killers.
In 1995, he was eventually sentenced to life in prison without parole for at least 25 years for the kidnapping and murder of two teenage girls, as well as the manslaughter and rape of his 15-year-old sister-in-law.
In May, the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) announced that Bernardo would be moved from the maximum-security Millhaven Institution in Ontario to the medium-security La Macaza Institution in Quebec.
The move sparked the ire of many Canadians and led the correctional service to launch a formal review of the decision. Some Conservative politicians called for Mr Mendicino to resign over his handling of the matter.
Speaking in Ottawa on Thursday, CSC Commissioner Anne Kelly acknowledged that Bernardo's move "upset many Canadians" who were left "looking for answers".
Hmmm
Barry
2023-10-28 15:45:38
The whole judicial system looking for a wood….deck
Barry
2023-10-28 17:02:43
Talk about stalking…. From murderer to stalker to serial killer….
Are laws adequate?
Her story is a snapshot of the issues facing victims of stalking, and is why advocates across law and women’s rights sectors are calling on Canada to overhaul how it handles the crime, from the police to the court to the communities we live in.
"Canada does not do enough when it comes to stalking," women’s rights advocate and educator Julie S. Lalonde told CTV News in a telephone interview. "It’s particularly dire when you compare it to other similar countries like the U.S. and even the U.K., where there is far more robust infrastructure for survivors than here in Canada."
A global conversation on stalking has been in the headlines, after high-profile stories like the September murder of a female washroom attendant in a Seoul subway station.
The man accused of murder had been stalking her since 2019, with the victim filing multiple police complaints against her attacker for illegally filming her, stalking her, calling her incessantly and uttering death threats.
Barry
2023-10-29 01:20:51
Stalking leads to murder…common in Canada apparently
Barry
2023-10-29 17:43:35
Research has shown that while stalking is a serious crime on its own, it can also be associated with further violence. According to the GSS, many stalking victims also experienced physical violence associated with the stalking incident. Nearly one-third of stalking victims (32%) experienced physical intimidation or threats of violence consistent with Criminal Code definitions of assault, while almost 1 in 5 (18%) were victims of actual physical violence.
Barry
2023-10-29 19:11:26
Barry
2023-10-31 06:34:48
A cascade of failures within Canada’s federal police worsened the country’s deadliest mass shooting, a public inquiry has concluded, in a damning indictment that found the force has shown little interest in reforming in the years since.
The Mass Casualty Commission, a joint provincial and federal inquiry, was investigating the 2020 shootings in Portapique Nova Scotia, in which a gunman driving a fake police car spent more than 13 hours evading capture and killing 22 people.
The commission released its final report on Thursday, detailing the fixes to the systemic deficiencies within the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) that are needed to restore trust in policing and to prevent another national tragedy, as well as the pressing need to address the root causes of violence.
Dem Mounties riding she- asses?
Barry
2023-10-31 16:54:30
They are eating she-asses in Venezuela
A few years ago, there were so many donkeys, or burros, in the Venezuelan state of Falcón that they were a problem — herds everywhere, causing highway crashes and blocking airport runways.
But over the past three years, the herds have shrunk dramatically as thousands of burros have been slaughtered for their meat by Venezuelans suffering through a near-famine.
“There’s no more burros here,” said Odalys Martinez, a resident of the Paraguana Peninsula in northern Falcón.
Killing the donkeys