CRIME SCENE: Man sought after home invasion in Aurora
York Regional Police have released images of a male suspect in connection with a March 6 home invasion in Aurora. (Credit: York Regional Police)
A thug who forced his way into a home in Aurora attempted to restrain a female occupant and assaulted a second victim, police have alleged.
York Regional Police released an image of a male suspect, who allegedly fled the home without making any demands or stealing anything.
Both victims suffered serious, but non-life-threatening injuries during the March 2025 home invasion in the Murray Dr.-Kennedy St. area.
Police urged anyone with information to call 1-866-876-5423, ext. 6630.
Oshawa stabbing
Durham Regional Police have released a photo of a male suspect wanted in connection with an April 29 stabbing in Oshawa. (DRPS
Police are searching for a suspect after finding a man in Oshawa with a stab wound to his arm.
Durham Regional Police said officers found the wounded man after responding April 29, around 3:45 p.m., to a report about an armed person in the Park Rd.-Adelaide Ave.
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He was transported to a Toronto area hospital where medical personnel treated his injuries.
The suspect fled prior to the arrival of police.
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Extortion probe
Harpal Singh, 34, Rajnoor Singh, 20, and Eknoor Singh, 22, all of Brampton. were charged with extortion following an April 30 shooting at a Brampton business (Peel Regional Police).
Three men have been accused of extortion following a shooting in Brampton.
Peel Regional Police said a Queen St.-Kennedy Rd. area business was shot at April 20 while no one was inside the building.
Police alleged the victim began receiving messages from an unknown individual making demands for money.
'Our investigators are relentless, and we will use every tool available at our disposal to identify, arrest, and hold those who commit these offences accountable,' said Deputy Chief Marc Andrews in a statement.
Harpal Singh, 34; Rainoor Singh, 20; and Eknoor Singh, 22 — all of Brampton — are each charged with extortion.
Stolen vehicle
Two young men and three youths face charges after a group of thieves fled from a stolen car in Oakville.
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Halton Regional Police said officers spotted a stolen Honda Civic in the Ninth Line-Dundas St. area on Friday at 2:30 a.m.
Police said the stolen car fled after officers attempted to stop it.
Officers searched the area and located the vehicle disabled — it had collided with a curb — on Presquile Dr. The occupants of the vehicle had taken off.
Justin Goulbourne, 19, of North York; Laamaani Hall,19, of Etobicoke; and three boys, ages, 14, 15, and 16, are charged with possession of property obtained by crime – over $5,000. The youngest three cannot be identified under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
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Yahoo
44 minutes ago
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Derrick Thompson guilty of all charges in Minneapolis high-speed crash that killed 5 young women
Jurors on Friday found Derrick John Thompson guilty of all charges in his murder trial for the high-speed crash that killed five young women nearly two years ago. The verdict was reached after about nine hours of deliberations over two days. Thompson, the 29-year-old son of a former St. Paul state representative, stood before Judge Carolina Lamas as she read the guilty charges: five counts of third-degree murder and 10 counts of criminal vehicular homicide for operating a motor vehicle in a grossly negligent manner and leaving the scene of an accident. Sentencing is set for July 24. Prosecutors say Thompson was driving 95 mph on Interstate 35W in a rented Cadillac Escalade SUV when he passed a Minnesota State Trooper, exited on Lake Street at 116 mph, and then ran a red light at Second Avenue, crashing into the victims' Honda Civic just after 10 p.m. June 16, 2023. Pronounced dead at the scene were Salma Mohamed Abdikadir, 20, of St. Louis Park; Sabiriin Mohamoud Ali, 17, of Bloomington; Sahra Liban Gesaade, 20, of Brooklyn Center; Sagal Burhaan Hersi, 19, of Minneapolis, and Siham Adan Odhowa, 19, of Minneapolis. They were returning from preparing for a friend's wedding, which was to be the next day. In September, prosecutors added the five counts of third-degree murder, which is defined in state statute as 'perpetrating an act eminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved mind, without regard for human life.' 'Members of the jury, not every murder is calculated or considered,' Assistant Hennepin County Attorney Paige Starkey said Thursday in the state's closing arguments. 'Not every murder is directed at a particular person or people?' Tyler Bliss, Thompson's attorney, tried to cast doubt during the trial that Thompson was the driver, despite jurors seeing surveillance video of him renting the Escalade from Hertz at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport and then driving away. Bliss suggested his older brother, Damarco Thompson, was the driver that night, pointing to evidence that his hat and a set of car keys were found inside the crashed SUV. In response, the state subpoenaed Damarco to take the stand. On Wednesday, he testified that he never drove the Escalade. He said they drove to MSP in a Dodge Challenger and that after Derrick rented the Escalade, they met near the airport. Derrick transferred some possessions from the Challenger to the Escalade, which he then drove away, Damarco said. To make its case, prosecutors presented a lot of video from the night, including of the violent crash and his interaction with police officers. Thompson was seen on video at Hertz renting the Escalade, then speeding past a state trooper parked under an I-35W overpass. Video showed the trooper wasn't able to catch up or turn on the squad's emergency lights or sirens before Thompson cut across all four lanes of traffic and turned off the interstate at Lake Street. He drove down the exit ramp and into the intersection without stopping or slowing for the red light. This is a breaking news story. Check back for more details. Man charged with hate crime in Boulder attack on 'Zionist people' to appear in federal court Minneapolis man sentenced for stabbing, hanging St. Paul woman's dog after argument Verdict awaits after closing arguments in Derrick Thompson's trial for crash that killed 5 Police consider whether 'King of the Hill' actor's sexual orientation played a role in his killing Jury deliberations begin in Harvey Weinstein's sex crimes retrial
Yahoo
2 hours ago
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A timeline of Milwaukee college student's murder; some remains washed up on Illinois beach
Jurors on June 6 found Maxwell Anderson guilty of four charges in the death of 19-year-old Sade Robinson. The verdict in Milwaukee County Circuit Court came more than a year after Milwaukee and the country discovered that the missing college student had been killed and her body dismembered and spread across the area. Here's what to know about the case and what has happened the prior 14 months. Robinson's final hours begin the afternoon of April 1, 2024, a day before she was reported missing in Milwaukee. The criminal justice student at Milwaukee Area Technical College told an employee who worked at her apartment building that she was excited for a date later that night. According to prosecutors: Robinson sent Anderson a text at 4:15 p.m. and the two arranged to go to a couple establishments in town at which Anderson previously worked. After dinner at Twisted Fisherman restaurant, 1200 W. Canal St., the two arrive in Robinson's car at Duke's on Water, 158 E. Juneau Ave. At 6:30 p.m., while at Duke's, Robinson sends a SnapChat to a friend. Robinson and Anderson leave the bar shortly after 9 p.m. Surveillance video shows two people arriving at Anderson's former home on the 3100 block of South 39th Street at 9:24 p.m. Robinson's phone is also located by GPS in the area of the home. In the early morning hours of April 2, 2024, Robinson's phone is located leaving Anderson's home and traveling throughout Milwaukee County. According to prosecutors: First to Pleasant Valley Park, along the Milwaukee River in the city's Riverwest neighborhood and then to Warnimont Park in Cudahy, arriving at 2:45 a.m. Surveillance cameras capture a car heading toward the pump house at Warnimont Park before also capturing a person descend the bluff to the beach level. The vehicle leaves the park at 4:31 a.m. and minutes later, Robinson's phone loses battery. Later that morning, the 2020 Honda Civic belonging to Robinson is found on fire on the 1800 block of North 29th Street. A witness said he saw a male exit the vehicle and toss a lighter into it before walking away. Video footage from a Milwaukee County Transit System bus shows Anderson, in the clothing description the witness provided (a gray hoodie and tan backpack), getting off the bus near his home. He arrives home at 8:43 a.m. Shortly before 5:30 p.m. that evening, someone finds a human leg belonging to a Black woman (later confirmed to be Robinson's) at Warnimont Park. The leg was found about two-thirds of the way down a 100-foot bluff, toward the shoreline and near a pump house. About 3½ hours later, a friend of Robinson reports her missing to Milwaukee police after she fails to return phone calls and show for her shift at Pizza Shuttle on Milwaukee's east side. Law enforcement pull over Anderson the afternoon of April 4, 2024, in his car and arrest him just blocks from his home. A hoodie found in his car matches the hoodie of the suspect who torched Robinson's car, according to prosecutors. Sometime that day, law enforcement officers execute a search warrant at Anderson's home. Officers find blood in one of the bedrooms and on the walls leading to the basement, prosecutors said. Several gasoline containers are also found. Police find a human foot that appears to match the leg found in Cudahy in the area of North 31st and West Galena streets, near where Robinson's car was found. Other human flesh was also found in the area. Authorities reportedly discover several more body parts the next day, including near 31st and Walnut streets. A person in a hoodie and backpack is captured on surveillance footage near 31st and Walnut. One week after his arrest, Anderson was charged with first-degree intentional homicide, mutilating a corpse, and arson in the death of Robinson. He has pleaded not guilty to all counts and remains in jail on $5 million bail. The Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office says it's conducting a "follow-up search" of Anderson's home, which became a place at which people left tributes for Robinson. The home has since been sold to new owners. The sheriff's office says that a torso and an arm believed to belong to Robinson was discovered in a remote, tree-lined stretch of beach in South Milwaukee. A memorial service was held for Anderson at the Baird Center in downtown Milwaukee. Sade entering the world "gave my life purpose," said Carlos Robinson, Sade's father. "I watched her grow from a tiny little baby to a beautiful, intelligent young lady that would make any father proud." The attendees, speakers and performers at the memorial displayed the gravity of Sade's reach on the Milwaukee community. Lifelong friends, classmates, professors, pastors, activists and her employers and coworkers were all in attendance. Mayor Cavalier Johnson had a brief conversation with Sheena Scarbrough, Sade's mother. An arm believed to belong to Robinson washed up on the beach in Waukegan, Illinois, according to authorities. Anderson's attorney, Anthony D. Cotton, sent a letter to Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Mark A. Sanders, asking that his client be furnished with a laptop that has discovery evidence in his case already saved on it. Robinson's estate and her mother filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Anderson. Robinson's family alleges Anderson's family later went to his home and threw away items inside the residence, then moved forward with selling it in an effort "to conceal and hide evidence." Without providing evidence, the lawsuit alleges a finger was found outside the property shortly after Anderson's home was sold. But authorities say that was not the case. A sheriff's spokesman said the assertion about a finger discovered on the property wasn't true. Judge Sanders rejected a request made by Anderson's attorney to grant Anderson access to a laptop. Cotton argued the device would have helped kept Anderson up to speed on developments in the case, and enabled him to aid in his own defense. At a July 12, 2024, hearing at the Milwaukee County Courthouse, Anderson's attorney requests the trial be moved to a different county and unsealed search warrants reveal some of what was found during the searches of Anderson's home. Detectives found a knife in the kitchen sink, an ax hanging on the living room wall and women's clothing hidden under a bench in the basement. A woman's ID card also was found during the search. A detective found a possible blood stain in Anderson's car, on a door speaker. Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Laura Crivello will now be presiding over the case as part of a judicial rotation schedule change ordered by Chief Judge Carl Ashley that affected many of the court's judges. A University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee grad, Crivello received her juris doctorate to practice law in 1993 from Marquette University Law School. She worked as an assistant district attorney in Milwaukee County from 1993 to 2018, when she was appointed to the court by then-Gov. Scott Walker. Crivello retained her seat in an uncontested 2019 judge race. A judge's term is six years. Milwaukee muralist Ruben Alcantar completes his mural of Robinson outside her former employer, Pizza Shuttle, a staple on the city's east side. She was remembered as a remarkable and caring person by her coworkers. Winston Milhans, her coworker, said Sade was that burst of energy that coworkers often give each other to help motivate them. Milhans said Sade was a "person that is a perfect example of who you want to be like. Her traits were remarkable." Robinson's mother, Sheena Scarbrough, joined lawmakers at the State Capitol to call for more state resources to be funneled toward understanding and tracking cases that end in the disappearance or death of Black women and girls like her daughter. Robinson's murder renewed a push by Democratic female lawmakers to create a state task force for missing and murdered Black women and girls. For the fourth time in a row, that effort failed. Assistant District Attorney Ian Vance-Curzan, the lead prosecutor, said he plans to enter roughly 500 exhibits and pieces of evidence as part of his case against Anderson at trial. He said he made no offers to Anderson, and that he expects the trial to run one to two weeks. Vance-Curzan signals a need for a bigger jury pool due to the media coverage of the case. Vance-Curzan said he intends to call in several scientific experts to testify, including a medical examiner, an anthropologist, a fingerprint analyst and a DNA expert. A person with expertise in collecting and crunching cellphone tower data also may be brought in. Cotton, Anderson's attorney, requests access to Robinson's encrypted data on her phone. Trial is delayed until May 2025 from Dec. 9, 2024. A memorial planned by Milwaukee County for Robinson has been canceled after County Board supervisors reported a flurry of racist, abusive emails over the proposal. The Robinson family files a lawsuit against the two bars that Anderson and Robinson went to about a year prior, arguing staff at each establishment didn't ask for her ID before she was served multiple alcoholic beverages, but sold them to her anyway. Robinson was later seen "visibly intoxicated" and "rendered defenseless," the lawsuit contends, leaving her "physically and mentally vulnerable." A pool of 50 to 70 jurors is expected to be called to serve. Typically, jury pools of 30 to 40 people are called to serve in most cases before they are whittled down to a final panel of 14 jurors who will hear testimony. Once testimony wraps up, 12 jurors are asked to deliberate; the others are dismissed. Jury selection got underway at 9 a.m. The trial is expected to last up to two weeks. Anderson, 34, is charged with first-degree intentional homicide, mutilation of a corpse, hiding a corpse and arson. Opening statements began at 8:45 a.m. and the jury was dismissed for the day at 4:48 p.m. after hearing from several witnesses and reviewing evidence, like video footage from a park where Robinson's severed leg was found. The state rested its case after seven days of testimony from more than 65 witnesses and the admission of more than 300 pieces of evidence. After the defense rested its case without calling any witnesses, the jury began deliberations for about 10 minutes until Judge Laura Crivello sent it home for the day. After another approximately 30 minutes of deliberation, the jury found Anderson guilty of all charges. Anderson's sentencing hearing was scheduled for 10 a.m. Aug. 15. Wisconsin doesn't have the death penalty, but Anderson faces a mandatory life sentence. There's a possibility he could serve part of the sentence in prison and later be eligible for extended supervision, but that will be decided by a judge. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Sade Robinson murder and dismemberment case: timeline of events


Hamilton Spectator
4 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
‘Are there any bears here?' Hamilton kids, some as young as 10, are armed with bear spray. How are they getting it?
Kids are using bear spray in swarmings, robberies, assaults and large brawls. Hamilton police are seizing it from high school lockers and from teens and children — some as young as 10 years old — who have armed themselves for 'protection' or to hurt others. These concerning incidents, which police warn are on the rise, are behind a request for the City of Hamilton to consider a bylaw regulating the sale of the noxious substance. There is no reason anyone needs bear spray in the city, said Ward 7 Coun. Esther Pauls, who is putting forward a motion to the general issues committee June 11. Project Street Light is targeting youth crime on the Mountain, following swarmings, assaults and 'Are there any bears here?' she asked, incredulously. 'Have you seen any?' Crimes involving a 'burning liquid spray,' including bear spray and mace, have more than doubled in the last four years, according to an analysis by police. And assault with a weapon and weapon possession offences were one of only a handful of categories of youth crime that rose last year, while other types of crimes committed by young people fell. There were 138 crimes involving a burning liquid spray last year, compared to 68 in 2020. This year, there were 41 incidents as of April 24, and police know there have been more since, said Supt. Dave Hennick, whose duties include overseeing youth crime and some aspects of crime prevention. 'There has been a troubling increase in the amount of incidents involving bear spray in city,' he said, adding that is why police are pushing for a proactive approach to keep the city safer. Hennick requested the statistical analysis because of those concerns and then reached out to Pauls. The motion asks city staff to investigate the feasibility of a bylaw to regulate the sale of 'deterrent spray' in Hamilton. Both Hennick and Pauls noted with alarm that there have been incidents in Hamilton involving offenders as young as 10. Children younger than 12 cannot be charged under the Youth Criminal Justice Act. 'It's unbelievable,' said Pauls, who is also a member of the police board. More than half the incidents documented by police involve young offenders between the ages of 10 and 19, while nearly half the victims are also young. Bear spray — made with capsaicin, the compound that makes chili peppers spicy — causes burning eyes, throat and skin irritation and can temporarily cause difficulty seeing or breathing. It's only intended use is in the wilderness, to deter bear or wildlife attacks. Hamilton police are seizing bear spray from high school lockers and from teens and children — some as young as 10 years old — who have armed themselves for 'protection' or to hurt others. Hennick said this is important because not only are younger people more likely to arm themselves with bear spray, they are more likely to be victims as well. Other cities in Canada have reported similar increases in bear spray incidents, with some taking steps to explore or impose bylaws, including Vancouver, Burnaby, Edmonton and Winnipeg. In March, for instance, the City of Kelowna in B.C. approved a bylaw that limits the sale to adults, requires businesses to keep records of sales for three years and requires sprays be kept out of the reach of public. Hennick said the hope is a Hamilton bylaw would limit the sale to those 19 and older, set expectations to retailers, such as checking identification and keep records of sales, and keep bear spray and mace out of reach of youths. 'I feel like this is a responsible step for us,' he said. Beyond enacting laws in Hamilton, Hennick said the hope is the city will also appeal to the Attorney General and Solicitor General to push for provincial changes. While it's not clear exactly why there has been such an increase in bear spray incidents, police believe the fact that it is easily accessible is part of the reason it has become the weapon of choice for many youth. It's simply easier to get than other weapons. The incidents in Hamilton have included fights between high school students and robberies. Paid duty officers have been required for security at the McDonalds near Lime Ridge Mall because of bear spray and other violent incidents involving teens. Many of the incidents are happening in Division 3, which covers the Hamilton Mountain, along with Flamborough, Dundas, Ancaster and Binbrook/Glanbrook. This area is also the most populous of the three policing divisions. Spike comes amid warning that the substance has become 'accessible weapon of choice' for In October, 15-year-old Jayden Russell was killed in a crash on the Lincoln Alexander Parkway. He was a passenger in a vehicle involved in a street race that happened amid escalating conflict between students at his high school, St. Jean de Brébeuf, and another, Nora Frances Henderson, that involved a large brawl and bear spray incidents. Last month, a 15-year-old was charged after allegedly forcing his way into a home and assaulting a family with bear spray and a knife. A nine-month-old baby was among those affected by the bear spray. According to the 2024 youth crime report, there were 959 young people between 12 and 17 involved in crime in Hamilton last year. This was a 1.5 per cent decrease from 2023, but 2.9 per cent higher than the five-year average. Bear spray use among kids is on the rise. Despite the overall decrease, several key areas of youth crime increased year-over-year in 2024. Assault with a weapon increased by 29 per cent to 84 incidents, possession of weapons increased by 53 per cent to 23 incidents, disturbances increased by 75 per cent to 21 incidents and vehicle thefts increased by 32 per cent to 29 incidents. Vehicle thefts have been a problem across the province, with 1,625 vehicles reported stolen in Hamilton alone last year. The issue is not just related to young offenders, but youths are among those charged. In some Hamilton cases, the thefts appear to be crimes of opportunity, including 'warm up thefts' where vehicles left running are stolen. For instance, a man missed the birth of his second child in Hamilton because teens allegedly stole his car while he was picking his daughter up from daycare. However, other incidents appear more organized, with people using trackers and cloned key fobs to steal vehicles from driveways. On May 29, three Hamilton teens were arrested and charged after an investigation by Niagara police into an alleged organized auto theft ring tied to 40 stolen vehicles. Police alleged electronic trackers were used to follow and steal primarily Lexus and Toyota vehicles from residential neighbourhoods. The stolen vehicles were brought to Hamilton, where their factory-installed trackers were disabled before being transported to Montreal and placed in shipping containers bound for Iraq. In the middle of the night on May 27, police were called to Rymal and Fletcher roads for people trying to steal vehicles from driveways. When officers arrived, they saw a group of teens flee in a white van. The van was abandoned on the side of Fletcher Road and police arrested an 11-year-old and a 14-year old nearby. The older child was charged. Nicole O'Reilly is a reporter at The Hamilton Spectator. noreilly@ Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. 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