Longest Pension Claim Is Lost

The Federal Court of Appeal has rejected a final petition in Canada’s longest-running petition for veterans’ disability benefits. The case dated from 1954 and was carried into court one final time by a former airmen’s aged widow: ‘We have to apply the law, no matter how heart-rending, whether we like it or not.’

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Handgun Sales Ban In Effect

All new handgun sales and transfers in Canada were yesterday outlawed by cabinet effective at 9:05 am Eastern. Applications to transfer firearms received by regulators prior to the deadline would still be processed, said the Department of Public Safety: “Firearms violence is a complex issue.”

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Curfew Buster Must Pay $1K

A Québec judge has upheld a four-figure fine on a harried office manager charged for breaking a Covid curfew by driving alone in his car at night. Québec had among the strictest pandemic lockdowns of any province: “I don’t know why I didn’t tell the accountant it could have waited.”

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Say Cops Feared Street Brawl

A Unifor executive threatened to lead 1,000 autoworkers in a street brawl with Freedom Convoy protesters, the Public Order Emergency Commission heard yesterday. Dave Cassidy, president of Local 444 in Windsor, Ont., denied remarks attributed to him in second-hand police notes: “At no time did I threaten physical violence.”

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Indigenous Protests “Unique”

Police lawyers in a confidential January 28 memo cautioned Ottawa authorities to go easy on Freedom Convoy protesters in case they were Indigenous. “Any police response considers the uniqueness of Indigenous occupations,” wrote the legal department of the Ottawa Police Service: “Focus on the requirements for peacekeeping, communication, negotiation and building trust.”

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Saw “Right Wing Christians”

The Freedom Convoy was a “movement by right wing Christians” to gain converts, claimed internal reports by an Ottawa police consultant Advanced Symbolics Inc. Documents did not disclose how much police paid for surveillance of Christian imagery at the protests: “These are really important insights.”

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Seek National Truth Database

A federally-funded advocacy group is petitioning senators for a national “disinformation reporting system.” The submission to the Senate human rights committee follows cabinet proposals to censor legal internet content: “Media play a powerful role in influencing the public perceptions.”

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Steak, Cake And Chardonnay

Governor General Mary Simon and travelling companions dined on steak, cake and Chardonnay on a costly junket to Dubai, records show. Staff claimed Simon and 45 friends ate typical airline food. Actual menus for meals that cost $218 per plate featured French crepes, Beef Wellington and Red Velvet Cake with Chantilly cream: “$218 per meal would represent groceries for a whole family.”

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Feds Relied On News Release

A federal agency relied on a news release from a volunteer press group in assessing risks of violence at the Freedom Convoy, according to records. Evidence at a judicial inquiry and parliamentary hearings contradict claims the protest was armed and dangerous: ““I saw reports in the media.”

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Facebook Post Was No Crime

Facebook messages of support for the Freedom Convoy don’t justify a conviction for mischief, the Ontario Court of Justice has ruled. Canadian courts do not jail people because of their opinions, said an Ottawa judge: “He is not to be convicted because of his political views.”

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CBC Pockets $156M: Records

The CBC awarded itself more than $156 million in pay raises and bonuses despite complaining of “severe” financial challenges. Documents obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation detail seven years’ worth of payments amid steep declines in CBC ad revenue: “We simply can’t be in a position where we have to keep cutting.”

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Gov’t Polled On Tax Blacklist

The Canada Revenue Agency in internal polling questioned whether to publish a blacklist of people who cheat on taxes. Parliament three years ago rejected a private bill that advocated naming and shaming tax evaders: “35 percent strongly agree the Canada Revenue Agency should publish a list.”

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Hid Files From Ombudsman

Federal departments are concealing records on contracting, says Procurement Ombudsman Alexander Jeglic. The Ombudsman cited unnamed departments for hiding documents he knew for a fact existed: “We have had to write to departments during the course of a review to remind them to provide documents we know exist.”

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