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CTV News
9 minutes ago
- CTV News
B.C. trucker charged with stunt driving in northern Ont.
Ontario Provincial Police stopped a trasport truck after clocking it travelling at 104km/h in a 60km/h zone in Kapuskasing, Ont. on July 29, 2025. (Supplied/Ontario Provincial Police) A commercial truck driver from British Columbia faces stunt driving charges after being caught speeding in northern Ontario last week. Ontario Provincial Police stopped the driver at around 4 a.m. on July 29 on Government Road in Kapuskasing. Police observed the commercial motor vehicle travelling at 104 km/h in a posted 60 km/h zone – 44 km/h over the speed limit. The 32-year-old man from Surrey, B.C., was charged with stunt driving. Additionally, under Ontario's traffic laws, the tractor portion of the vehicle was impounded for 14 days and the driver's licence was suspended for 30 days. The motorist is scheduled to appear in court in Kapuskasing on Sept. 23 to answer to the charge. Stunt driving penalties and enforcement In Ontario, stunt driving includes driving 40 km/h or more over the speed limit on roads with a posted limit under 80 km/h. The offence also covers dangerous behaviours such as racing and intentionally cutting off other vehicles. 'These high-risk actions endanger everyone on the road,' said police in a news release Sunday. 'The OPP remains committed to saving lives on roads, waterways, and trails by enforcing traffic laws and promoting safe driving habits.'


CBC
10 minutes ago
- CBC
Man in life-threatening condition, 3 arrested after shooting in downtown Toronto
A man was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries and three people have been arrested after a shooting in downtown Toronto, police say. Officers responded to the sound of gunshots near John Street and Adelaide Street W. around 10:30 p.m., Toronto police said in a post on X. When they arrived, they found a man in his 30s who had been shot. The suspects fled in a vehicle, police said, but three people were later arrested. The victim was taken to hospital where his injuries were found to be life-threatening. A police spokesperson said his condition had not changed as of 8 a.m. Sunday. The investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to contact police.


CBC
10 minutes ago
- CBC
LeBlanc says he expects Carney, Trump to talk 'over the next couple of days'
Social Sharing Dominic LeBlanc says he expects Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump will have a conversation with each other "over the next couple of days" as Canada tries to find a way out of a 35 per cent blanket tariff on exports to the U.S. "We believe there's a great deal of common ground between the United States and Canada in terms of building two strong economies that work well together," said LeBlanc, the minister responsible for Canada-U.S. trade, on CBS's Face The Nation. LeBlanc left Washington earlier this week without a deal, but he told host Margaret Brennan he came out of discussions "with a better understanding of the American concerns in the trading relationship…. So we're prepared to stick around and do the work needed." Few Canadian goods subject to new rate On Friday just after midnight, Canada's tariff rate rose to 35 per cent following a Trump executive order that criticized Canada's "lack of co-operation" in curbing the flow of fentanyl southward and for retaliating against Trump's existing tariffs. But only a very small number of Canadian products will actually be subjected to that rate — specifically goods not covered by the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement, which governs trade between the three countries. WATCH | LeBlanc insists there wasn't a good deal before Trump's Aug. 1 deadline: No trade deal with U.S. better than a bad one, LeBlanc says 2 days ago LeBlanc told Brennan that Canada was "obviously disappointed" by Trump's decision to raise the tariff rate. In a separate interview on Face The Nation, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said Canada was the only country aside from China to retaliate against Trump's tariffs. "If the president is going to take an action and the Canadians retaliate, the United States needs to maintain the integrity of our action — the effectiveness — so we have to go up," Greer told Evans. Trump tariffs face legal challenge When asked whether Canada should drop its countertariffs, LeBlanc cited Ottawa's 25 per cent countertariff on U.S. steel and aluminum imports. "There's a 50 per cent tariff when we want to sell [steel] into the United States, so effectively we're blocked from doing that. But the national security interest of Canada requires we have a viable steel and aluminum sector." Trump invoked his 35 per cent levy using a law that allows the U.S. president to take emergency economic measures to "deal with any unusual and extraordinary threat" to national security. That tariff is facing a legal challenge that has now reached a federal appeals court, putting it further along in the U.S. court system than any other tariff lawsuit.