
Stumbling man charged with impaired driving, cocaine possession in Essa Township
Nottawasaga OPP says witnesses reported seeing the 38-year-old man exhibiting impaired behaviour in a parking lot near Young Street around noon.
Officers located the vehicle and police say after they spoke with the driver, they placed him under arrest for impaired driving. He was also charged with possession of cocaine.
Police urge the public to report suspected impaired drivers by calling 911.
The accused in this case was handed an August court date to answer to the charges, plus a licence suspension and vehicle impoundment.
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CTV News
25 minutes ago
- CTV News
Ex-pilot called himself messiah on climate-change mission, day before alleged hijack
A worker moves luggage trolleys outside Vancouver International Airport in Richmond, B.C., on Thursday, Dec. 31, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck The day before the suspected hijacking of a light aircraft triggered a security scare at Vancouver's airport this week, former commercial pilot Shaheer Cassim posted on social media that he was a 'messenger of Allah' sent to save humanity from climate change. A 39-year-old man with the same name has now been charged with hijacking, constituting terrorism, over the incident on Tuesday that saw Norad scramble F-15 fighter jets before the light plane safely landed. RCMP say the suspect had an 'ideological motive' and allegedly seized control of the plane at Victoria International Airport after threatening a flight instructor, before flying to Vancouver. Read more: Man charged in alleged plane hijacking that disrupted YVR operations Images posted on social media depicting the arrest of the Cessna's pilot on the north runway of YVR show a bearded man who resembles climate activist Cassim. In his Facebook post on Monday, Cassim says he's the 'messiah sent to save humanity from climate change and usher in an era of world peace.' He warns of 'abrupt runaway global warming' that will cause humans to go extinct within a few years. In 2012, Cassim held a news conference before going on a cross-country bicycle ride to raise awareness for global warming. His Facebook profile says he was employed from 2008 to 2010 by now-defunct KD Air, a small airline based on Vancouver Island. The airline's former owners, Diana and Lars Banke, said in an interview that Cassim was one of the smartest and best pilots they ever worked with, calling him a fast learner who was highly intelligent. But Lars Banke said Cassim left the airline after getting 'bored' and then went to medical school. He also said Cassim believed the world was coming to an end. Diana Banke said she was 'very surprised' to hear of Cassim's charges, saying he was quite young when he worked for them and was 'like a kid.' 'Something would (have to) be going on that's not normal,' Lars Banke said. 'He was, I would say, a caring person.' Diana Banke said she remembered Cassim 'doing a really long bicycle trek,' and that he brought a dog along with him. Lars Banke said he recalled that Cassim was somewhat interested in environmentalism, but he was unaware of any kind of religious beliefs. 'He never spoke religion with us,' Diana Banke said. Cassim's online posts include musings on religion, climate science, and advocacy for tolerance and peace, including a claim 'the Angel Gabriel appeared before me and gave me a message from Allah.' 'I'm really surprised that he would've done something like this,' Diana Banke said. His Facebook profile says Cassim attended high school in Lloydminster, Alta., before studying aviation at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. He also describes himself as the editor of a blog devoted to the impact of climate change on the Arctic. It includes hundreds of posts since 2011, many of them highly technical, with the latest entry made on Saturday. It is titled: 'Will humans go extinct soon?' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 17, 2025.


CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Problem tenants finally leave P.E.I. rental property, but landlord's issues continue
Social Sharing Thamara DeVries is finally beginning the process of reclaiming her dream home, after months of watching the property turn into a nightmare. The landlord rented out the fully furnished house in Wheatley River, P.E.I., back in February to tenants she initially believed to be a mother with three daughters. But shortly after they moved in, DeVries discovered it was actually two adults and 10 children, along with multiple animals — and said they were destroying her home. Her battle to evict the problem tenants stretched up until this week, when the family obeyed a July 11 order to vacate from the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission, packed their belongings into a moving truck, and left. "I don't ever wish this on anyone. I don't understand why everything takes so long," DeVries told CBC News on Wednesday. "There's appeal after appeal after appeal, which is extending the time, which is extending the damages to the property." After discovering how many people were living in the residence, DeVries immediately contacted the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission (IRAC), which handles disputes between landlords and tenants on P.E.I. She argued that the tenants had given false information, that the home had an unreasonable number of occupants, and that unreasonable damage was being done. The commission initially found that there were no valid grounds for eviction. The monthly rent of $2,900 was being paid, at that point. As a series of accusations and counter-accusations from both parties dragged on, DeVries watched the condition of the home deteriorate. 'It seems like a horror movie' Eventually the tenants allowed her to walk through the property, where she discovered knives jammed into door frames to keep people from entering, along with a foul odour throughout the house. She said the downstairs of the property had been turned into a greenhouse for growing plants and all the furniture had been tossed outside, exposed to winter conditions. She also found kittens in the bathtub, and alleged the family was breeding cats in her home. Outside, she said the tenants had turned the yard into farmland and dumped several truckloads of manure on top of where her well sits. Despite repeated requests to have it moved, she said the pile remains there. During a hearing at the end of May, DeVries presented documents showing no rent had been paid since April and photos of the damages. Ruling on the non-payment issue, IRAC eventually said the tenants had seven days to vacate, although a document viewed by CBC News noted: "We make no finding with respect to the merits of the landlords' claims respecting eviction on the basis of damage to property, for example." WATCH: 'That process has been painful': P.E.I. house owner has spent months trying to evict her tenants: 'That process has been painful': P.E.I. house owner has spent months trying to evict her tenants 9 days ago A Prince Edward Island woman says the province should make it easier to evict problem tenants. Thamara DeVries says tenants ruined the inside and outside of her house in Wheatley River. She says they made a greenhouse indoors, put manure on the lawn right over the well, and used the home to breed cats. But as she tells CBC's Connor Lamont, trying to get them out has been a challenge. But the tenants appealed that eviction notice, arguing they couldn't find housing within a week and alleging there was discrimination in the P.E.I. rental market against large families. The tenants also applied for a return of rent totalling $14,500, along with "compensation for emotional distress" in the amount of $12 million, according to IRAC documents. "The tenants say that they withheld rent because of the landlord's behaviour, [which] they characterize as harassment which breached their quiet enjoyment of the rental unit," one document says. On July 11, IRAC denied the tenants' appeal for more time and terminated the rental agreement, effective Tuesday, July 15. The commission also ordered the tenants to pay DeVries outstanding rent in the amount of $7,203.23, minus the $2,000 damage deposit that will stay with the landlord. The tenants left Tuesday evening, DeVries said, with the RCMP present to make sure the move went without incident. She's since been through the house again, and was "beyond devastated" by its state. When a CBC News team visited on Wednesday, there was a pervasive smell of cat urine. The back door had been taken completely off of its frame and left outside, most of the furniture and decor items were either gone or badly damaged, and the driveway was covered in manure. A formerly white couch with a floral pattern was a dingy brown, and there were a few cats still living under the floor. "It just seems like a nightmare. It seems like a horror movie," DeVries said. "It looks like somebody was in here purposely damaging the property. It doesn't feel like it was… a wear-and-tear type of situation." She isn't sure how much it will cost to fix up the home, but expects the pricetag to be in the thousands of dollars. On the brighter side, DeVries said she is touched by Islanders offering their support to help her paint and clean up the property. She plans to move back into the home once it's ready — and said she'll never rent it out to anyone again. She hopes her situation results in landlords having more rights in the future, and urged IRAC to speed up the eviction process in extreme cases like hers. "I understand that there are bad landlords, and I understand there are bad tenants, but what I find is that tenants do get away with a lot of damage," she said. "The process is so long that, unfortunately, it's inflicting extra damages that should be avoidable."

CBC
an hour ago
- CBC
Neighbours shocked after dad and son charged with manufacturing and smuggling guns
Social Sharing Residents of a suburban cul-de-sac in east London say they were shocked when heavily-armed police officers in tactical gear descended on their quiet street and later laid drug manufacturing and smuggling charges against a father and son who had lived on the street for years. The police raid happened May 29 on Fundy Avenue, with an "intense and sudden" police presence before dawn that ended with police seizing home-made guns, firearms parts, a 3D printer and an assortment of drugs. "It happened very early in the morning," neighbour Alex Raemisch said. "We saw the lights, sirens, and lots of activity." The small circle of houses is a tight-knit community, according to another neighbour Rachel Chew. There's a communal basketball net for the kids on the street, and the neighbours have garage sales and barbecues together, she added. "This place is a beautiful spot in the evenings and on weekends," she said. The surprise raid included tactical officers and police dogs swarming the small bungalow at around 5 a.m., neighbours said. Benito Schiavone, 33, and his father, Modesto Dino Schiavone, 57, are now facing charges related to smuggling and manufacturing prohibited weapons and devices. They will also be charged with drug possession when they appear in court, officials said. When CBC News knocked on the accused men's door, the older Schiavone answered but declined to speak. He returned home the same day he and his son were arrested, according to neighbours. The two men were rarely seen by neighbours, and the home belonged to another family member, Chew said, adding she was angry that illegal activity could have been happening next door. "You don't know what that might bring," she said. "This is our little hub…and I think that that's just kind of an insult to what we're trying to build together." The Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA) worked with the London police to investigate the two men and to conduct the raid. The two men were initially flagged in October 2024 when packages containing a silencer and a 50-round magazine were intercepted at a mail processing facility in Mississauga, officials said. While the raid came as a shock to the neighbours, similar searches happen about six times a year in suburban homes, said Abid Morgan, the director of the CBSA's Ontario firearm smuggling enforcement team. "It's just your average neighborhood where we see a lot of this type of firearms manufacturing taking place, especially utilizing 3D printers," he explained. "From time to time, narcotics are seized as well." Starting in 2019, CBSA began to see 3D-printed weapons appear regularly, Morgan said, adding that as the printing technology advances and is able to make increasingly capable weapons, it's becoming fairly commonplace. While the exact number of firearms seized during the Fundy Avenue raid is unknown, it was on the "upper end of average," Morgan said. The items seized included: privately manufactured firearms firearm parts a 3D printer 35 g cocaine 24.5 g carfentanil oxycodone and boric acid The accused are scheduled to appear in London court in July, facing eight counts each of unauthorized possession of a prohibited firearm, four counts each of smuggling prohibited devices, four counts each of unauthorized importation of a prohibited device, and two counts each of manufacturing a prohibited firearm.