The hearing to determine if a man accused of killing RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang is fit to stand trial has begun in the BC Supreme Court in Vancouver.
Jongwon Ham, who appeared at the hearing Friday wearing a grey suit and white sneakers, is charged with first-degree murder in the stabbing death of Yang in October 2022.
The three-day hearing comes after Justice Michael Tammen ordered a fitness assessment on the day Ham’s judge-alone trial was set to begin last month.
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An interim publication ban temporarily prevents the reporting of evidence at the fitness hearing, which is scheduled to continue next week.
A fitness hearing, or fitness trial, allows a judge to determine if the accused has the mental capacity to understand the charges and is able to meaningfully participate in their own defence, and does not examine their mental state at the time the alleged crime was committed.
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Yang was stabbed to death on Oct. 18, 2022, when she tried to speak to a man sheltering in a tent in Broadview Park in Burnaby, B.C.
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B.C.’s police watchdog, the Independent Investigations Office, has said the man in the tent was shot and wounded by Yang.
In a statement in December 2022, the office said its chief civilian director determined there were no reasonable grounds to believe an officer committed an offence in the incident.
RCMP have said Yang was a mental health and homeless outreach officer who had joined the police three years before her death.
RCMP in New Brunswick are warning about a rise in youth radicalization, which they believe is fuelled by extremist online spaces.
Just this week, police said they arrested a youth late last year for the facilitation of a terrorist activity. That youth is now under a terrorism peace bond, which is a first for the province.
“A terrorism peace bond can be used when investigators fear that a terrorist offence may be carried out, enabling the use of robust monitoring and de-escalation tools,” RCMP said in a release.
“This case is part of a broader trend observed by the (Eastern Region’s National Security Enforcement Section) in New Brunswick involving youth radicalization driven by exposure to extremist online spaces and peer-to-peer networks.”
A spokesperson for the RCMP wouldn’t say which extremist network, if any, the youth was a part of.
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“The youth is subject to very strict conditions as a result of entering into this peace bond. Police services across (New Brunswick) are aware of this peace bond and will, as they do every day, work diligently to keep our communities safe,” wrote Insp. Aaron Glode in an email.
Canada lists 4 new terrorist entities, including online extremist groups
David Hofmann, the director of the Criminology and Criminal Justice Program at the University of New Brunswick, said youth extremism is a problem seen nationwide.
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“This is the next big thing security-wise. The government and security agencies are focused on the fact that there are young people who, typically through the internet but also through face-to-face interaction are becoming more radical,” he said.
Hofmann said he believes the New Brunswick case could potentially be related to nihilist violent extremism groups, such as the 764 network, or possibly a far-right extremist group.
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The 764 network is known to target children and youth by manipulating them into recording and sharing intimate images or taking part in acts of self-harm, violence and animal cruelty.
“Whether this is neo-Nazi far-right content, whether this nihilistic violent extremism, it’s the heinousness. It’s the awfulness of the act,” he said.
764 added to list of terrorist entities
Last December, Canada added 764 to its list of terrorist entities.
In total, four new groups were added under the Criminal Code, including three transnational online networks that promote ideologically motivated violent extremism (IMVE).
The move marked the first time any country had 764 as a terrorist organization, a statement from Public Safety Canada said.
In Nova Scotia, Halifax Regional Police alleged a 16-year-old charged in January with child pornography-related and inciting hatred charges was affiliated with the 764 network.
Halifax teen allegedly part of online extremist group has 4 of 5 charges dropped
The Crown has since dropped four of five charges against that teen, who is scheduled to return to court Feb. 26, because there was “no realistic prospect of conviction on those four counts” after reviewing the evidence.
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Meanwhile, Hofmann said extremism can be very challenging to identify and police, especially if ideologies are spread globally.
“It’s incredibly difficult to police this sort of thing, as the internet is ubiquitous … it’s like finding a needle in a haystack,” he said.
RCMP are asking the public to remain vigilant and inform police of any suspicious activities.
The thief also stole a number of other items from different shops in the city.
The thief stole 29 chocolate bunnies(Image: Cambridgeshire Police)
A man has been jailed after stealing 29 chocolate bunnies from a supermarket. Jordan Cole, 36, stole the Lindt chocolate bunnies from Sainbury’s in Sidney Street, Cambridge, on Wednesday, January 28.
Between September 30 and January 24, Cole also stole a range of items from Cambridge shops. These included perfume from John Lewis, laundry products from B&M at the Beehive Centre, meat from Aldi, in Newmarket Road, and T-shirts from Hugo Boss, in Market Hill.
He also breached his criminal behaviour order (CBO) by entering the Aldi on Newmarket Road. At Cambridge Magistrates’ Court on Friday, January 30, Cole, of no fixed abode, pleaded guilty to 12 counts of theft and breaching a CBO.
He was sentenced to 24 weeks in prison and ordered to pay £300 in compensation.
PC Alex Thake, who investigated, said: “Cole’s series of thefts caused significant distress and upheaval for businesses and their employees. We take shoplifting offences seriously and will continue to work hard to bring offenders to justice.”
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A former Regina police sergeant who used the force’s database to find and date scores of vulnerable women has been handed a conditional sentence of two years less a day, to be served in the community.
Robert Semenchuk was also sentenced to three years’ probation after that.
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“His conduct … was illegal and immoral,” Judge Marylynne Beaton told court Friday.
The 53-year-old pleaded guilty last year to breaching trust and using a computer for unauthorized purposes.
He is no longer on the force.
Court has heard he used a police computer system over eight years to contact 33 women.
He reached out to them using fake names while pretending he didn’t know who they were.
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The victims have told court they fell for a con man and that his actions have left them feeling used, distressed and mistrustful.
In a Surrey, B.C., pretrial centre, an inmate is goaded into fighting his cellmate — dubbed a “rat” by fellow prisoners — but then dies after being put in a 10-minute chokehold.
In a Vancouver court, a convicted gangland killer with multiple murders to his name refuses to testify at a hearing, fearing the consequences if he co-operates.
And in a Quebec prison, serial killer Robert Pickton is fatally speared in the head by a fellow prisoner.
What binds the cases, prison advocates say, is the “con code” — a set of unwritten rules among inmates that they believe is behind a sharp rise in attacks behind bars. But they say Canadian courts have been reluctant to take the situation seriously.
Advocates say the phenomenon — also known as the inmate code or prison code — is the violent day-to-day reality for those involved in the prison system, well known to inmates, guards and lawyers. And while the Correctional Service of Canada acknowledged the problem, an officer said it was in a “Catch-22” situation, if reporting prison code violence would itself put an inmate at further potential risk.
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Numbers provided by the correctional service show prison violence has increased by about 45 per cent in recent years. In fiscal 2021-22, there were 2,265 “assault related incidents” in federal institutions, while in 2024-25, that jumped to 3,279. The figures include assaults involving both inmates and prison staff.
Catherine Latimer, executive director of prison reform group the John Howard Society of Canada, pointed to a contempt-of-court ruling issued by the B.C. Supreme Court in December, after convicted killer Cody Haevischer refused to answer questions under cross-examination by a Crown lawyer, citing the “inmate code.”
He said the code prohibited inmates from “ratting” on fellow gang members or others if they’re still alive.
Haevischer was found guilty of six counts of first-degree murder and one count of conspiracy in 2014 over his role in the so-called “Surrey six” murders in 2007.
He was testifying at an evidentiary hearing last July as part of his ongoing bid for a stay on his case, claiming police misconduct and inhumane prison conditions tainted his trial.
“As an inmate in prison, and a general population inmate specifically, naming names or co-operating in any way, I’ll be viewed as a rat and put my life in immediate danger,” Haevischer testified.
The judge cited him for contempt and told him, “your inmate code, as you’ve described it, isn’t a code that prevails in this courtroom,” while ruling his claims of “duress” lacked an air of reality in the absence of a “concrete threat” to his life by other inmates.
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But Latimer said the court’s finding was concerning because prisoners know violating the inmate code by co-operating with authorities can put their lives in danger.
“It should be taken seriously and is taken seriously by correctional authorities and by others,” Latimer said. “All I can say is if I had been (Haevischer), I would have opted for the contempt charge rather than loss of life.
“This guy I’m sure was quite genuine in being afraid for his life.”
Chris McLaughlin, a senior project officer with the Preventive Security Intelligence Branch of Correctional Service Canada, said the code “can vary from institution to institution.”
“There are a number of different aspects to it which include not co-operating with authorities, paying your debts and stepping up if you’re disrespected,” he said. “The inmate code is a thing that does exist. We acknowledge that. We train our staff in recognizing the negative behaviours that are explicit within that.”
He said inmates who feel unsafe could inform prison staff of any “incompatibilities” with other offenders.
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Co-operating with prison authorities may be against the inmate code — but McLaughlin said authorities can’t take action on threats they don’t know about.
“If somebody feels that they are in jeopardy already and that they would increase that jeopardy somehow by seeking out some type of assistance, then we’re kind of in a Catch-22 situation,” he said.
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Latimer said the murder of B.C. serial killer Robert Pickton at a maximum security institution in Quebec raised a litany of questions about how someone like him, whose offences made him a target under the inmate code, was accessible to harm.
Pickton was waiting for medication in a common room of Quebec’s Port-Cartier Institution on May 19, 2024, when fellow prisoner Martin Charest thrust a broken broomstick into his face. Pickton died in hospital less than two weeks later.
“He was a sex offender and part of the prison code is that if you get a shot at a sex offender, you have an obligation to sort of assault them,” Latimer said.
Charest pleaded guilty to the first-degree murder of Pickton in September 2025, saying he “killed him for the victims.”
Latimer said an independent observer’s report for the correctional service into the killing was inadequate.
“How did he get access to Pickton? How did he get within range of assaulting him? Normally they would keep people like Pickton, who’s particularly vulnerable, in a protected wing, protected from other prisoners who are assaultive,” she said. “There’s a lot in that (report) that doesn’t add up and leaves me with still a lot of unanswered questions about what happened to Robert Pickton.”
Adherence to the inmate code has also had deadly consequences for those in jail for minor offences.
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At a pretrial centre in Surrey, B.C., in August 2016, John Murphy was goaded into a deadly fight with cellmate Jordan Burt. They were not enemies, but “dominant members” of the segregation unit where they were housed told Murphy that Burt was a rat, according to a B.C. provincial court sentencing decision.
The ruling says Burt was serving time for a probation violation, and the Toronto Star reported in 2019 that Murphy was behind bars for breaching a driving-ban imposed after he was involved in a fatal drunk-driving incident when he was 20.
Burt, 21, denied the “rat” accusation, and Murphy, 25, didn’t want to fight, but the other inmates were “vocal in making clear” that Murphy was obligated to fight Burt. Burt “gained the upper hand, putting Mr. Murphy in a chokehold,” which lasted for more than 10 minutes before Murphy died.
Burt pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to five and 1/2 years.
“They liked each other, but the unique and warped prison culture in which they lived pitted them against each other,” B.C. provincial court Judge James Sutherland found in 2018.
“This incident arose from the prison culture or this code, and ultimately it perpetuates the prison code and prison politics, and thus the power of distribution in prison. The incident cannot be condoned, even if perpetuating the code was not Mr. Burt’s motivation.”
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‘THE INMATE CODE STILL LIVES WITHIN MYSELF’
Lawrence Da Silva served 19 years in prison for the violent carjacking and confinement of Toronto lawyer Schuyler Sigel and his wife, Lynn, and has been out since 2016.
He now works with the John Howard Society, and said in an interview that even after nearly a decade on the outside, the inmate code still pervades his life.
“Unfortunately sometimes the inmate code still lives within myself,” he said. “It was something that was trained into us, not only by other offenders, but by the empowerment of guards.”
He said he learned very early on that talking to guards, or speaking with them for too long, “could look suspicious and you could be targeted.”
Adhering to the code, inside and outside prison, is “vital” to survival, he said.
He said prison hierarchy puts “rats” at the bottom, along with so-called “box thieves” who steal from the cells of fellow inmates, and sex offenders. Da Silva said “going against the grain” of the code would have violent, sometimes deadly, consequences.
“There are people inside that will not allow you to break the rules. They will attack you, they will kill you. And they will kill you in front of the guards. I’ve been stabbed multiple times,” he said.
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“Where I came from, the con code was exacerbated by methodical means of violence, throwing boiling oil or jam or water mixed with coffee — things that will not roll just off your skin. This is serious violence that people carry out for the con code.”
Da Silva said it is “offensive” to hear judges and politicians acknowledge the existence of the code but not take it seriously, citing remarks by Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew last year.
Kinew denounced a Supreme Court of Canada finding that mandatory minimum sentences over child sex abuse materials are unconstitutional.
“Not only should (you) go to prison for a long time, they should bury you under the prison. You shouldn’t get protective custody. They should put you into general population, if you know what I mean,” Kinew said in November.
Edmonton defence lawyer Tom Engel said Kinew’s comments were a “disappointment,” echoing criticism he’s levelled at other Canadian politicians for failing to condemn prison violence.
“Politicians are not only condoning it, but they’re encouraging it,” Engel said.
Engel said he’s been involved in many cases that also point to a “code of silence” among prison guards, allowing violence and complicity in inmate attacks to go unchecked.
The code is well-known in legal circles, he said, but it’s incumbent on lawyers to present compelling evidence for judges to take “judicial notice.”
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John Randle, spokesman for the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers for the Pacific Region, said the inmate code and prison populations have shifted a lot over his 17 years as a guard.
He said gang members are no longer mixed in with rivals in general population. But the abolition of administrative segregation has made managing violent prisoners more difficult.
“I think that risk of violence is present whether you break the code or not in jail,” he said, and it would be “naive” to believe violence could be stopped in prisons, citing the impact of the drug trade behind bars.
“Drugs have always been probably the No. 1 cause of violence in prison,” he said, and also inmate debt that resulted from the trade. “With drones and technology, you have every single gang all vying for that power and they all have drugs coming in.”
Nora Demnati, a prison law practitioner in Quebec, is the president of the Canadian Prison Law Association. She said the B.C. Supreme Court’s contempt finding in the case of Cody Haevischer stirred up “disappointment” in prison law circles.
“Judges tend to not recognize how real it is,” Demnati said, adding that the unique circumstances of an inmate under duress cannot be reconciled with a “strict application of the law.”
“It’s naive to believe that prisoners are perfectly protected in prison because things happen very quickly in prison.
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“A lack evidence of the immediate fear or the temporality of the fear or of the threat to him, those are things that cannot be explained as the law wants them to be explained in terms of the rules of evidence.”
Demnati said she’s had “countless” clients who have been attacked in prison on “mere suspicion” of violating the inmate code, and those who have reported their fears to authorities have had their concerns dismissed.
She said courts should stop considering violence committed in prison an “aggravating factor” when sentencing people who have little choice. Instead, she called for greater recognition from the justice system and the correctional service of the complex underlying factors — unresolved trauma, mental health issues and addiction.
“As long as they refuse to see that and address it on a purely punitive and (through) a security lens, violence in prison will prevail because they’re not addressing the core reason why people engage in violent behaviour in the first place,” she said. “But other than that, I don’t know. I’m not too much of an optimist when it comes to changing the system.”
A man who filmed in women’s toilets has been jailed. Alan Russell, 46, was reported to his bosses by a colleague in April 2025 after he followed her to the women’s toilet at their workplace in Huntingdon.
CCTV footage showed Russell waiting for the victim to close the cubicle door, before entering the toilets while filming on his phone. This was in breach of a sexual harm prevention order (SHPO) imposed by Lincolnshire Magistrates’ Court in July 2015 after Russell was convicted of multiple voyeurism offences.
Part of the SHPO forbade Russell from entering any female toilets, loitering within 10m of any public toilet, or entering any room that females use as a changing room.
The 46-year-old of Princes Street, Peterborough, admitted to voyeurism and breaching a SHPO at Cambridge Crown Court on Thursday (February 5). He was sentenced to one year and six months in prison.
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Toronto police knew it had a trust issue before seven serving officers were charged as part of an organized crime investigation.
A study completed by the police services board last year found public trust in the force was “strained,” with many concerned about misconduct and the uneven application of standards.
“From the public, we heard similar concerns about mistrust, systemic bias, and a lack of visible accountability,” part of a lengthy study found.
“Repeated incidents of misconduct and social media narratives reinforce skepticism, especially among youth and newcomer communities.”
Those concerns spiralled into a crisis on Thursday, when York Regional Police announced they had charged seven serving Toronto cops in a massive corruption and organized crime investigation.
The charges included allegedly leaking police information to an organized crime group that then carried out shootings, exortions and robberies. Other charges relate to alleged bribery.
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Those charges have left police leadership in the difficult position of trying to explain and investigate what happened.
Global News crime analyst Hank Idsinga said the force had a lot of work left to rebuild already fragile public trust.
“I think you’ve got a lot of questions, I think you’ve got a lot of questions that haven’t been answered yet,” he said.
“Toronto, what the heck is going on down there? Especially if you take into consideration everything that has happened over the last few years in this city.”
Idsinga pointed out that, if the charges against the officers are proven, it could cast doubt on testimony they’d provided in other cases, potentially opening up a stream of appeals.
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“Maybe they’re involved in an armed robbery investigation from five or six years ago. And if they were a key witness to that armed robbery investigation and somebody was convicted and is doing jail time,” he said.
“I guarantee the defence lawyer from that case is going to look at that list of officers here involved and say, ‘Hold on a second, the credibility of this officer who was a key witness when my client was convicted is absolutely in question. I’m filing an appeal.’”
Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow told reporters Thursday she would meet with Toronto police Chief Myron Demkiw to resolve the issue.
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During an event, the local police chief disavowed the accused officers, saying their alleged actions did not represent the service.
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“The allegations against these individuals do not represent the Toronto Police Service,” Demkiw said. “They do not represent who you are. They do not represent what our organization is and stands for.”
Ian Scott, the former director of the Special Investigations Unit, said police had taken a “big step” in announcing the arrests and accepting there was a problem.
“But to some degree they are fighting a bit of a rear-guard action,” he explained. “The misconduct and alleged criminal offences have taken place, and they’re trying to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.”
There are those who say neither Demkiw, nor the police services board, nor the mayor can lead any investigation into how seven Toronto police officers were allegedly corrupted.
Ontario Liberal MPP Karen McCrimmon said the charges had shattered confidence in Toronto police — leaving the force at a delicate crossroads.
“These are very, very serious charges and it really does strike at the heart of the relationship between the police and the constituents. That trust and that bond,” she told Global News.
“I think this is very, very dangerous.”
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McCrimmon said the provincial government must order a judicial inquiry into Toronto police and the officers to rebuild trust. Any investigation that isn’t open to the public, she said, would fall short.
“It’s not as important for justice to be done if it’s not seen to be done; it has to be both. It has to be fully accountable to the people and they have to have trust in the process so it can’t be manipulated,” McCrimmon said.
“For a full judicial inquiry, you’re before a judge and lawyers, there are guardrails … you know that the outcome is real. It’s valid, it’s legitimate. Anything else done behind closed doors or done informally will not have that same credibility with people.”
A spokesperson for Ontario’s Solicitor General Michael Kerzner did not address questions and said only local police would answer them.
Premier Doug Ford appeared to brush off the suggestion, saying the investigation would be well-handled by local cops.
“The investigation is ongoing, so they’re going to continue their investigation,” he said on Wednesday. “I feel both chiefs are doing an incredible job, and they’re going to cross every ‘t’ and dot every ‘i.’”
Ford said the arrest of seven serving officers in a massive organized crime investigation should not shake public confidence.
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“I don’t want to paint a broad brush or tarnish the police,” he said.
“We have phenomenal police officers … I don’t want the pubic to lose trust in our great trust, they are incredible. There’s always, (in) any organization, a few bad apples and the courts are going to decide.”
Warning: Details in this story may be disturbing to some readers. Discretion is advised.
The coroner’s inquest into the deaths of a Prince Rupert family of four heard testimony on Thursday that supports murder-suicide as a cause of death.
The inquest is looking into the June 2023 deaths of Janet Nguyen and Christopher Duong and their two sons, aged two and four.
On Thursday, an RCMP officer testified that the crime scene supported the theory that Duong killed his children and Nguyen before taking his own life.
“The children were drugged prior to being murdered, based on the cold medication located on scene, being consistent with their toxicology results,” Cpl. Matthew Blumberg testified.
“Janet Nguyen was strangled with an electrical cord to the point it was extremely tight; she could not have done that to herself.”
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A video from the couple set out their “last will and testament” and was shared between the couple’s phones a few days before the family was found dead, Blumberg said.
Blumberg said there was no sign of a struggle between Duong and Nguyen.
He described how the bodies of Duong, Nguyen and their two children were found in the same bed.
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Blumberg said the boys had teddy bears placed at their feet, and were believed to have been drugged by their father.
“It was observed that neither of the children had obvious signs of injury, but their lips were blue and their skin was pale,” he told the hearing.
Inquest begins into deaths of Prince Rupert family
Previously, the inquest heard that in the early morning hours of June 10, 2023, Prince Rupert RCMP found a Mercedes SUV abandoned, packed with suitcases and a large amount of cash.
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Its owners, Nguyen and Duong — both in their 30s — later returned to the scene. They told police they were being followed and a hit, or assassination, had been ordered against them.
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Police told the inquest Duong was known to local officers and was alleged to have been involved in the Prince Rupert drug trade.
He was taken into custody under the Mental Health Act, while Nguyen and the couple’s children were returned to the family home.
The family was found dead on June 13, 2023.
Day two of coroner’s inquest into deaths of Prince Rupert family of four
The inquest heard that the Ministry of Children and Family Development was contacted by police after Duong was apprehended and a social worker was expected to make contact with the family during a five-day window.
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Social worker Scott Bertram testified on Wednesday that the response time frame could be overridden, and that had he known Duong was to be released from the hospital a few hours later, he would have upgraded it to 24 hours.
A social worker attempted to make contact with Nguyen on June 13 but was unsuccessful and the local office was notified of the deaths the following day.
RCMP say a Quebec City-area teenager is facing a terrorism charge for allegedly using social media to promote the neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen Division.
The force says the accused, who cannot be named due to his age, is believed to have produced and distributed online material with the aim of inspiring and recruiting others.
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The teen is expected to appear in court in Quebec City on Feb. 6 to face a charge of participation in the activity of a terrorist group.
The federal government describes Atomwaffen Division as a militant neo-Nazi terror group that calls for acts of violence against racial, religious and ethnic groups.
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It was founded in the United States in 2015 and has since expanded, and has been listed as a terrorist entity in Canada since 2021.
An Ottawa man was sentenced in September to 10 years in prison for the promotion of hate propaganda against Jewish people that was produced for the group.
A number of school pupils were turned away from the school on Wednesday (February 4).
13:54, 05 Feb 2026Updated 13:55, 05 Feb 2026
Ernulf Academy(Image: Astrea Academy Trust)
A teenager has been arrested after a Cambridgeshire school received a hoax bomb threat. Cambridgeshire Police were called to Ernulf Academy in Eynesbury, near St Neots, just before 9am on Wednesday (February 4).
The school put emergency procedures in place as a caution after receiving a bomb threat. Officer arrested a 15-year-old boy from Cambridgeshire on suspicion of suspicion of malicious communications.
He has since been bailed until May 3 with conditions not to enter or go within the school location. The school reopened as usual on Thursday (February 5).
Sergeant Rob Streater, from the St Neots Neighbourhood Team, said: “Neighbourhood officers will be out on foot patrol today and Friday, and available to speak to anyone who may have concerns.
“On behalf of the school and local police, we would like to thank parents and members of the community for their support.”
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