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CTV News
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PM Carney says he'll speak with Trump 'when it makes sense'
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CBC
35 minutes ago
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N.S. man's sexual assault conviction overturned because case took too long
A Nova Scotia man's sexual assault conviction has been overturned because his case took too long to go through the justice system. Jamal Zaki was charged with sexual assault on April 13, 2022. After a provincial court trial concluded 22½ months later, he was convicted of the charge on March 25, 2024. The Supreme Court of Canada has set strict timelines for the completion of criminal matters in lower courts. In provincial courts, the so-called Jordan timeline calls for cases to be done in 18 months. Zaki's lawyer argued his conviction violated his client's rights under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms because the case exceeded the 18-month mark. But Judge Gregory Lenehan dismissed Zaki's application, saying much of the delay in the case was due to the defendant's actions. The judge specifically singled out a defence request to obtain notes from a therapist who treated the complainant and for a delayed start to the trial because of double booking in the courts. However, the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal disagreed with Lenehan's calculation. A three-member panel said the trial judge should have been paying more attention to the looming deadline. "There was no trial management undertaken to clear an earlier half-day of trial time, nor any consideration of breaking the trial time down into shorter segments in order to conclude sooner than February 26, 2024," the Appeal Court wrote. "Had any inquiry been made, the urgency of the situation would have been apparent." Once the Appeal Court determined that a large part of the delay could not be attributed to Zaki, it issued a stay of proceedings on the sexual assault charge.

an hour ago
Carney announces over $1B in supports for clobbered softwood lumber industry
Prime Minister Mark Carney vowed to use Canadian lumber to build homes and provide financial supports for the forestry sector as the U.S. hikes duties on the softwood industry. We will be our own best customer by relying on more Canadian lumber for Canadian projects, Carney said at the announcement held a manufacturing mill in West Kelowna, B.C., Tuesday. The sector has been a longstanding target of the U.S., which recently raised anti-dumping duties on Canadian softwood. B.C. Forests Minister Ravi Parmar described the hit as a "gut punch" for the province's forestry industry (new window) which has seen thousands of workers laid off over the last few years. Carney called the duties unjustified while promising to move the industry away from its dependence on the U.S. market. This dependence creates costly uncertainty, he said from the Gorman Bros. Lumber Ltd. mill. It weakens our industry's ability to weather downturns. It makes lumber more expensive. WATCH | Carney announces supports for softwood lumber: The prime minister unveiled a suite of new measures Tuesday that he promised would help the industry serve a growing Canadian market and those of new, reliable trading partners around the world. Carney said his government will use Canadian lumber and workers as part of its promise to build affordable homes. The Build Canada Homes program, promised during the election campaign, will launch this fall and provide up to $25 billion in financing to private sector home builders. We are going to write our own story rather than letting others dictate theirs to us, he said. Carney also announced up to $700 million in loan guarantees for forestry companies and $500 million, largely in grants and contributions, to spur product development and market diversification for the hard-hit industry and millions for reskilling lumber workers. Catharine Tunney (new window) · CBC News · Reporter Catharine Tunney is a reporter with CBC's Parliament Hill bureau, where she covers national security and the RCMP. She worked previously for CBC in Nova Scotia. You can reach her at