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Man, 39, dead after fatal collision involving a pedestrian on Highway 748

Man, 39, dead after fatal collision involving a pedestrian on Highway 748

Yahoo2 days ago
Edson RCMP are investigating after a fatal collision left a 39-year-old man dead.
According to a Monday press release, the collision occurred between a pickup truck and a pedestrian on Highway 748. EMS attended the 39-year-old man, identified as a Yellowhead County resident, but was declared dead on scene.
The matter is currently under investigation.
RCMP said the highway will be closed between Township Road 540 and Township Road 542. An update will be sent once the highway reopens.
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Calls for hockey culture change continue after decision in sexual assault trial
Calls for hockey culture change continue after decision in sexual assault trial

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Calls for hockey culture change continue after decision in sexual assault trial

The spotlight on Canadian hockey culture dimming with the acquittal of five players of sexual assault charges is potentially part of the fallout from Thursday's verdict. Hockey Canada vowed in 2022 to tackle "the toxic behaviour that exists in many corners of the game." At that time, the organization was under fire for its handling of sexual assault allegations against members of the 2018 Canadian junior men's hockey team, and for using a portion of registration fees to settle lawsuits. Michael McLeod, Carter Hart, Alex Formenton, Dillon Dubé and Cal Foote were acquitted of all charges Thursday in courtroom in London, Ont. Four of the five were NHL players when they were arrested in 2024. The case had sent shock waves across Canadian hockey and reached the House of Commons, where members of Parliament grilled Hockey Canada executives on what they knew and did. Does all the talk of changing hockey culture get walked back with the judge's decision Thursday? "The concern is that the community will see this decision, and they'll say hockey culture doesn't need to change, because these guys did nothing wrong," said Greg Gilhooly, a lawyer and survivor of sexual abuse by hockey coach Graham James. "The legal system doesn't address something more fundamental, and that's what should the guys have done in that room. If there's one thing that is undeniable, it's that in that room that night, there was an absence of leadership. There was an absence of character. Nobody said at any time, 'I don't care what she's saying, this is wrong. We need to be better than this. Stop.' "Does a failure of character mean that someone should go to jail? It does not. The hope that I have is that coming out of this, hockey, and society at large, will realize that you need to think about your actions and avoid putting yourselves in situations like this and act with character, not act as the situation allows you to act. Just because you can, doesn't mean you should." When TSN reported the allegations and a civil settlement stemming from them in 2022, Hockey Canada's feet were held to the fire not only because players were at its gala on the night in question to celebrate the team's win in the 2018 world junior championship. The revelations lifted the lid on other hockey issues such as racism, hazing, discrimination and homophobia. Sponsors left Hockey Canada in the aftermath, but some have since returned. Scott Smith resigned as president and chief executive officer and was eventually replaced in 2023 by Katherine Henderson. Hockey Canada published a slate of reforms in 2022, including mandatory training for athletes and staff on sexual violence and consent. The organization held a 2023 summit in Calgary to address toxic masculinity in hockey, and another in Ottawa in 2024 analyzing unhealthy outcomes in hockey. "The problem absolutely will be that coming out of this decision, there will be a reaction saying that 'Hockey Canada had it right all along, the board shouldn't have stepped down, these guys did nothing wrong,'" Gilhooly said. "That's not what this decision says. This decision says those boys are not guilty of the crimes they've been charged. That's it. All of the good change that is taking place within the sporting community and society at large is good and it is needed and it needs to be emphasized and the change needs to continue. "Absolutely, there will be a real fear now that that change won't be pressed forward as much as it should be." Hockey Canada said Henderson wasn't available for an interview Thursday, and offered a list of changes and reforms enacted from its action plan. "While important progress has been made since 2022, there is still more work to be done and we will continue to be transparent and accountable to Canadians as we drive systemic change within our National Winter Sport," it said in a statement. Canada's sports minister in 2022, Pascale St-Onge, ordered a forensic audit of Hockey Canada to determine if public funds were used as part of a civil settlement with the trial's complainant, and froze its funding until the body became a signatory to the Office of the Sport Integrity Commission (OSIC). Canada's Secretary of State for Sport Adam van Koeverden said in a statement on X, formerly known as Twitter, "We take note of the independent court's decision today. This is a critical moment in sport and this case has sparked a national conversation about safe sport and the problematic culture in men's hockey." Van Koeverden acknowledged Hockey Canada has made progress since 2022 in addressing "longstanding systemic failures." "It's critical that this work on safe sport continues across the sport system, because we know that when safeguards are weak or absent, real harm occurs," he wrote. The author of "Crossing The Line; Violence and Sexual Assault in Canada's National Sport" was at the courthouse in London. Laura Robinson's 1998 book examined sexual assault and hazing in junior hockey culture. "I don't think much has changed," she said. Robinson points out that while men are involved in decision making around women's national teams, the coaches and managers Hockey Canada assigns to the men's under-20 teams are exclusively male and from junior men's leagues. "If Hockey Canada really wanted to really change things, you need to have a change in leadership everywhere," Robinson said. "Is there no woman in Canada who could coach or be on the coaching staff at Hockey Canada for the world juniors or at the Olympics? "I'm sure they're going to have women with the women's team, but it's the guys that need to change. We don't have this happening with female athletes." A 2022 open letter to Canada's sports minister and a parliamentary committee signed by 28 sport academics from 21 universities stated "sexual violence and misogyny are deeply rooted problems in men's ice hockey." Thursday's decision didn't alter Toronto Metropolitan University associate professor Laurel Walzak's belief that culture change is needed in hockey. "I'm still really concerned as I was in 2022, probably the same concern," she said. "I signed the letter as a very concerned person related to hockey in Canada. "I go back to this letter and I feel like another letter needs to be written. We can copy and paste it, actually. "We need to continue to keep a really close eye on Hockey Canada from a national level, provincial level, local level, all the levels and questioning what's happening. We cannot forget the amount of money that Hockey Canada had in its power to be able to hide and keep things secret." An advocacy group for abuse survivors in sport stated Thursday's legal decision "risks reinforcing the very culture of silence and impunity that survivors of sexual violence in sport have long fought to dismantle." "We are concerned this verdict will have a chilling effect,' said Athletes Empowered managing director and former gymnast Amelia Cline in a statement. "Survivors watching this case unfold may now feel even more reluctant to speak up, fearing that their pain will be minimized, their experiences invalidated, and justice nearly impossible to achieve." This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 24, 2025. Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press

Government bid to deport Italian man accused of money laundering postponed
Government bid to deport Italian man accused of money laundering postponed

Hamilton Spectator

time6 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Government bid to deport Italian man accused of money laundering postponed

GTA grandfather and convicted killer Vincenzo (Jimmy) DeMaria was scheduled to take the witness stand to fight his deportation to Italy on Friday when his hearing was abruptly postponed over abuse of process accusations. DeMaria, 71, a former Mississauga financial services manager and baker, has been accused by Canadian authorities of laundering money for international organized criminals. DeMaria never got the chance to testify on Friday, after a dispute broke out over the use of secret recordings made by Italian police between himself and Italian visitor Vincenzo Muià in 2019, while DeMaria was in custody at Collins Bay Institution in Kingston. The secret recordings were made as Italian police investigated the slaying of a leader of the 'Ndrangheta, or Calabrian Mafia, in Italy. Italian police came to Canada in 2019 as they probed the murder of Muià's brother, Carmelo (Mino) Muià, in Italy. Things heated up at the online hearing on Friday when Andrej Rustja, a lawyer for the minister of public safety, said that the government will not longer be relying on those intercepted conversations in DeMaria's deportation appeal. For years, DeMaria's lawyers have called the surveillance an example of 'foreign interference' which breaches Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms and amounts to abuse of process. They should not be admissible in a Canadian legal proceeding, DeMaria's lawyers argued. On Friday, they argued that the surprise announcement that the government would no longer be relying on the intercepted conversations disrupted their defence plans and amounted to abuse of process. The hearing has been postponed to Oct. 20. DeMaria moved to Canada with his family from Siderno, Italy in 1955 but never applied for citizenship. The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) has been seeking his deportation for years, alleging he is tightly connected to the 'Ndrangheta, or Calabrian Mafia, which authorities say has global scope. DeMaria served eight years in prison in Canada after he was convicted of second-degree murder for a 1981 shooting, which police said was over a $2,000 drug debt, police say. DeMaria's parole conditions bar his association with organized crime figures. He was detained in Collins Bay penitentiary after he was ordered deported in April 2018. He was released in 2020 over health concerns during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Killer's deportation hearing abruptly postponed
Killer's deportation hearing abruptly postponed

Hamilton Spectator

time8 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Killer's deportation hearing abruptly postponed

GTA grandfather and convicted killer Vincenzo (Jimmy) DeMaria was scheduled to take the witness stand to fight his deportation to Italy on Friday when his hearing was abruptly postponed over abuse of process accusations. DeMaria, 71, a former Mississauga financial services manager and baker, has been accused by Canadian authorities of laundering money for international organized criminals. DeMaria never got the chance to testify on Friday, after a dispute broke out over the use of secret recordings made by Italian police between himself and Italian visitor Vincenzo Muià in 2019, while DeMaria was in custody at Collins Bay Institution in Kingston. The secret recordings were made as Italian police investigated the slaying of a leader of the 'Ndrangheta, or Calabrian Mafia, in Italy. Italian police came to Canada in 2019 as they probed the murder of Muià's brother, Carmelo (Mino) Muià, in Italy. Things heated up at the online hearing on Friday when Andrej Rustja, a lawyer for the minister of public safety, said that the government will not longer be relying on those intercepted conversations in DeMaria's deportation appeal. For years, DeMaria's lawyers have called the surveillance an example of 'foreign interference' which breaches Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms and amounts to abuse of process. They should not be admissible in a Canadian legal proceeding, DeMaria's lawyers argued. On Friday, they argued that the surprise announcement that the government would no longer be relying on the intercepted conversations disrupted their defence plans and amounted to abuse of process. The hearing has been postponed to Oct. 20. DeMaria moved to Canada with his family from Siderno, Italy in 1955 but never applied for citizenship. The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) has been seeking his deportation for years, alleging he is tightly connected to the 'Ndrangheta, or Calabrian Mafia, which authorities say has global scope. DeMaria served eight years in prison in Canada after he was convicted of second-degree murder for a 1981 shooting, which police said was over a $2,000 drug debt, police say. DeMaria's parole conditions bar his association with organized crime figures. He was detained in Collins Bay penitentiary after he was ordered deported in April 2018. He was released in 2020 over health concerns during the COVID-19 pandemic. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

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