Sask. top court overturns gang member murder conviction it describes as 'miscarriage of justice' (www.cbc.ca)
The province's Court of Appeal has quashed a second-degree murder conviction it describes as a "miscarriage of justice."
The province's Court of Appeal has quashed a second-degree murder conviction it describes as a "miscarriage of justice."
Faced with increasing pressure to respond to widespread concerns about the cost of living and questions about his leadership, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a series of new measures Thursday meant to deal with rising housing and grocery prices.
Pierre Poilievre is accusing a union representing WestJet employees of "trying to silence freedom of speech" by demanding an apology from the company after the Conservative leader spoke on the PA system on a recent flight.
Paul Eric Wilson’s eight-year sentence was overturned by the Appeal Court under the recently enacted Good Samaritan Act.
Several B.C. hospitals and long term care facilities have seen a spike in COVID-19 cases recently according to the provincial health ministry, but these cases are not being named or reported publicly....
In the decades-long conversation about conditions at Her Majesty’s Penitentiary, correctional officers are rarely heard. They do not speak publicly over concerns for their employment and instead are represented in public by the union president....
Dawson City, Yukon, resident David Beaudoin was hiking through Tombstone Territorial Park recently when he spotted something unusual. It looks like an old battery, but Beaudoin has some other ideas.
A federal judge has reserved his decision in the deportation case of the truck driver who caused the deadly Humboldt Broncos bus crash.
When Donna Teasdale opened the lid of an old crate that had been hauled up in a fishing net, she knew she had caught a big one. Twenty big ones, in fact. It was a case of Enfield muskets from the time of the U.S. Civil War. But for anyone to appreciate the incredible find, Teasdale would have to keep them from falling apart.
Several Peel District School Board students, parents and community members are concerned about a seemingly inconsistent approach to a new book weeding process intended to ensure school library books are inclusive, but that appears to have led some schools to remove thousands of books published in 2008 or earlier.
The first of thousands of injured Canadian military veterans are set to soon begin receiving disability payment top-ups under a $283-million class-action settlement. But policy changes mean no newly discharged members will be entitled to the extra benefits.
Average asking price for a new tenant has risen by 9.6% in last year, Rentals.ca says
In a 6-month span, a 16-month-old baby and both her parents died of suspected drug toxicity....
Some Liberal members of Parliament heading into a national caucus retreat this week say they're facing blowback from voters at the doorsteps — and they hope the prime minister and his inner circle listen to their concerns before it's too late.