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Parent allegedly threatened to stab 12-year-old soccer player during a game in Vaughan. The team denies it happened

Parent allegedly threatened to stab 12-year-old soccer player during a game in Vaughan. The team denies it happened

CTV Newsa day ago

An image of the soccer match between two U13 girls teams on June 20 (left), and what the field looks like in the day (right). (Andrea Yepez, City_of_Vaughan/X)
Police are investigating after multiple coaches with a girl's soccer team in Vaughan, Ont. said a parent hurled a death threat at one of their 12-year-old players during a recent game—an incident which the opposing team is denying happened as described.
Two U13 teams, Kleinfield Nobleton Soccer Club's iModel and Glen Shield Juventus FC, took to the soccer field at Concord Thornhill Regional Park on June 20 to play the last game of their regular season. Despite the game being rescheduled and a last-minute field switch, the match was unfolding in typical fashion.
But about 15 minutes into the second half, the game took a turn for the worse.
In video reviewed by CTV News Toronto, two players—one from each team—can be seen chasing after the ball toward the far end of the field, close to the sidelines. It appears the iModel player bumps into the Juventus player, causing them to fall onto the ground and prompting the referee to blow their whistle.
As soon as the whistle blows, a man's voice can be heard shouting: 'I'm going to f***ing stab you.'
Based on the footage alone, it is unclear who made the comment but iModel's coaches say it was a parent from the other team who allegedly hurled the threat toward one of their players.
Juventus tells CTV News Toronto that it is aware of the footage that was taken from this match but said 'it does not make clear what is being said, especially given that the event in question took place on the opposite side of the field, away from the camera.'
'It was obviously disruptive. It was also traumatizing for a young girl, being 12 years old, to hear an adult say something that made her so fearful,' Nikita Moriarity, iModel's assistant coach, told CTV News Toronto.
Moriarity said that the player who the threat was directed towards was understandably 'distraught' following the incident.
She said that the atmosphere at the field also immediately shifted as players and parents realized the seriousness of the comment.
'It was no longer about the fun of the game. It was no longer about the competition of the game, all of that was now gone,' Moriarity said. 'It was about the physical, emotional and psychological well-being of a 12-year-old young girl.'
Andrea Yepez, the team's head coach, and Jessica Ponce, assistant coach, also confirmed the order of events to CTV News Toronto.
They said that as soon as the comment was made they started talking to the referee to discuss what should be done but were met with indifference.
'He said, 'Well, it's a parent. I can't do much about the parents,'' Yepez recounted. 'It felt kind of like it was being a little undermined, about the severity of what was called or what was heard.'
At that point, Yepez said the team made the call to end the match. Instead of apologies from the other team, Ponce says the Juventus coach accused them of not wanting to play the game anymore.
'Then he just picked up his stuff and he kind of furiously walked off the coaching side, and he started to walk towards the parents. And then, I didn't hear it, but various parents came to me afterwards saying that the coach was saying, 'Come and join Juventus, better coaching staff. You're not happy with your coaches, come to us. We're the better team. We're the winning team,' and then walked away,' Ponce said.
Aldo Lippa, club president for Glen Shields Juventus FC, tells CTV News Toronto they take allegations of 'inappropriate behaviour' seriously, and that they do not condone any kind of threatening behaviour that jeopardizes the safety and well-being of anyone involved.
'At this time, we are conducting an internal review of the situation and will cooperate fully with the appropriate authorities as needed. To date, we have not received any formal communication from York Regional Police beyond what has been reported publicly,' Lippa said in a written statement. 'Based on the information currently available to us, we categorically reject the version of events being described by the opposing team's coaches, which we believe to be both inaccurate and misleading.'
Police investigating reported threat
York Regional Police confirmed to CTV News Toronto that they have been notified of an incident, saying a call was made the following morning.
'We are investigating the reports of a threat being uttered from a parent spectator to a youth (player) on an opposing team. No charges have been laid at this time, however investigators have identified the suspect,' Const. James Dickson said in an emailed statement.
Johnny Misley, president of Ontario Soccer, said they are aware of what had transpired on the field between Kleinburg Nobleton Soccer Club and Glenn Shield Juventus, adding they take abuse allegations 'very seriously.'
'As such, we started a process where the York Region Soccer Association, that is the governing district over these two clubs, are managing the case,' Misley said, noting the two teams involved are direct members of YRSA.
Since referees were involved during the dispute, Misley said there's a protocol that needs to be followed in relation to game-related discipline.
'Obviously, they understand the game was abandoned, so there's reports that are done, so they follow-up with those jurisdictions. Plus, they have abilities to do other things as well. They could, for example, they could fine the clubs based on their own policies and procedures that deal with unruly control over parents and those types of things,' Misley said.
Tony Fonseca, the sporting director for York Region Soccer Association, called what allegedly transpired 'repulsive,' telling CTV News Toronto the organization will await the results of York Regional Police's investigation before conducting their own probe into what happened.
'The two clubs and York Region Association are acting accordingly to ensure that situations like this will never happen again. Those deplorable behaviours should be banned from our environments,' Fonseca said.
Because the accused parent is not a direct member of the YRSA, Fonseca says it is up to Juventus on what they will do next. The team, for its part, says it will address any concerns that are revealed through their own internal investigation.
But members of iModel's coaching staff say that the incident has them concerned about the toxic environment that young girls can sometimes face while competing in youth sports.
'I want to stress that this is no longer about the game. It's about the safety and well-being of children and specifically, the alarming reality that a 12-year-old girl was threatened with a violent act during a sanctioned soccer match, in front of referees, coaches, and parents,' Yepez said.
'We are trying to create a safe, inclusive space for girls in sport … not lose them due to traumatic experiences like this.'

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'We should have seen it': Bowness community hall warns others after falling victim to fraud
'We should have seen it': Bowness community hall warns others after falling victim to fraud

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  • CTV News

'We should have seen it': Bowness community hall warns others after falling victim to fraud

The president of a Bowness non-profit is warning others to be vigilant about screening volunteers after allegedly being defrauded of more than $66,000. The president of a local community association is warning other non-profits in Calgary to be vigilant about screening volunteers after allegedly being scammed out of thousands of dollars. Two men, one with a violent criminal past, are facing fraud charges in connection with the case, accused of embezzling more than $66,000 from the Bowness Ratepayers Scout and Guide Hall Association. On Tuesday, Calgary police arrested Nathan Michael Mizera, 41, and Joshua Tyler Bredo, 40, and charged both with fraud over $5,000. 'All of this money—it's community that is suffering because this is a hall of the community. This isn't a private venture; this is owned by the community,' said Gord Barge, president of the Bowness Ratepayers Scout and Guide Hall Association. 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Joy of playing soccer returns for Canada's Jordyn Huitema after harrowing U.S. home invasion
Joy of playing soccer returns for Canada's Jordyn Huitema after harrowing U.S. home invasion

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Joy of playing soccer returns for Canada's Jordyn Huitema after harrowing U.S. home invasion

Social Sharing The smile was wiped from Jordyn Huitema's face as quick as the forward's stride on a soccer pitch. She was discussing her and the Canadian national women's team's long-standing rivalry with the United States when a Toronto reporter asked Huitema about being victim to a home invasion last month. With a night off on May 1, the fourth-year member of the National Women's Soccer League's Seattle Reign FC locked all doors of her home in Mercer Island, Wash., at 8:30 p.m. PT and went to bed. Soon, Huitema heard noises downstairs but the home alarm didn't sound. She quickly entered survival mode, grabbing clothes, her phone and barricading herself in the bathroom by hiding in a locked water closet. 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Dismay in Nunavut as daughter in Inuit identity fraud case goes public with her story
Dismay in Nunavut as daughter in Inuit identity fraud case goes public with her story

CBC

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  • CBC

Dismay in Nunavut as daughter in Inuit identity fraud case goes public with her story

A year after her mother was sentenced to prison for defrauding Inuit organizations to help pay for her education, an Ontario woman went public for the first time about the case — and Jordan Archer's story has again stirred up anger and frustration among Inuit. Archer, formerly Nadya Gill, spoke to the Toronto Star earlier this month about her mother Karima Manji's admission of guilt and conviction in a Nunavut courtroom last year, and how the case derailed Archer's own life and career. Archer's story has aroused little sympathy in Nunavut, however, where many Inuit feel she and her twin sister Amira Gill still owe them an apology. The two sisters had originally been charged along with their mother, but the charges against the twins were ultimately dropped in early 2024 when Manji pleaded guilty and took "full responsibility for the matters at hand." Manji was sentenced to three years in prison last summer after admitting to defrauding Inuit organizations of more than $158,000 for her twin daughters' education. Manji had claimed she adopted her daughters from an Inuk woman, Kitty Noah. The Toronto Star story describes Archer as a first-generation Canadian, and Manji as an immigrant from Tanzania who had lived for a brief time in Nunavut. Archer's father, it says, is British and the family has no Inuit or Indigenous background. In the story, Archer said since the case was first reported she has "abandoned" her law career, lost a contract to play in a professional soccer league, and now works part time at a hockey rink. Archer told the Toronto Star she was unaware of her mother's fraudulent claims to secure her scholarship money. She feels she's paid an unfair price for something she said she had no knowledge of. She also said she never claimed to be Inuk by blood. She said her mother presented her with an Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. (NTI) enrolment card at the age of 17, telling the sisters they were eligible to receive the cards, which were for Inuit beneficiaries, because of a connection Manji had had with an Inuit family from Iqaluit. Archer told the Star she had "no idea" her mother was using the NTI cards to secure tens of thousands of dollars in scholarships for her, though she knew the cards allow the card-holders to receive benefits. She said her mother controlled many of her life decisions, including all her applications, finances and logistics. CBC News reached out to Archer, along with her mother and sister, several times since 2023, but received no response. In April, Archer refused an interview with CBC News to tell her story. Noah Noah, son of the late Kitty Noah, said he wasn't interested in speaking with the Toronto Star about Archer's story. He feels she's been unreasonably portrayed as a victim. "I'm disappointed, I mean, to say the least. To play the victim in all this, it just is… it's not right," he said from his home outside Iqaluit. "[The sisters] should have been held accountable. I mean, I still believe that." Asked if he has any sympathy for Archer's current situation, Noah said he doesn't. "I mean, what they did was wrong, and in every sense of the word," he said. "So not being able to use what she had stolen [Inuit identities] is just, I think, the way it was supposed to work out." 'A lot of throwing her mother under the bus' Crystal Semaganis, who is Plains Cree from the Little Pine First Nation in Saskatchewan, has been following the story since it broke in 2023. The Indigenous activist, who now lives in northern Ontario, shared her frustration with the Toronto Star article about Archer earlier this month in a Facebook post that has since been widely shared. "With this recent article, there was a lot of deflection, a lot of throwing her mother under the bus kind of thing, and not taking any responsibility," Semaganis said. "You know, it didn't shine a light on the actual problem. It totally glossed it over, and it was a total diversion to what the actual issue is." To Semaganis, the issue is about exploitation and theft from people who are already disadvantaged. "First Nations, Inuit and Metis populations are marginalized in this community across this nation and we have very limited resources, especially for the North," she said. "You know, my youngest son is Inuk, and I've lived in Nunavut. So I know first hand the disparity that exists between settler communities and Indigenous communities." Semaganis said it's time for Archer to accept some responsibility and apologize. "The truthful way forward would be to say, 'I did this, this is wrong. Let me make reparations.' But that hasn't happened yet." 'Genuine' apology needed, MP says Nunavut NDP MP Lori Idlout also finds Archer's claims hard to swallow. She said she finds it "quite unbelievable" Archer was duped by her mother. "As much as I want to be compassionate towards her, she sounds like she's a smart young lady and to hear the excuses that she gave about trusting her mother, it is quite difficult for me to believe her story." Idlout said Manji's actions "definitely caused harm" because that scholarship money was intended for Inuit, who are already "robbed" of many opportunities because of barriers they face in accessing education. "It's triggering as well, because as Inuit, we are given so many barriers to be successful. It's so hard to complete high school. It's hard to go to university. It is so hard to access scholarships," she said. "To see how NTI's system was manipulated, when we feel like it's already challenging enough, it is quite harmful." Idlout believes Archer should do her part and learn more about Inuit history. "We still have intergenerational trauma from residential schools, from dog slaughters. These are very difficult experiences that we're still being forced to experience through intergenerational trauma," Idlout said. "If she genuinely cares about what impact she had on Inuit, I think she should do her research, learn more about Inuit and give that genuine apology." James Eetoolook, who decades ago was involved in negotiating the Nunavut Agreement, the largest land claim settlement in Canada which led to the creation of Nunavut, remembers the hard work and sacrifices many Inuit leaders had to make during the decades-long process. "They had to be away two weeks at a time, sometimes more than that. And if you start doing it every month, it took a toll in a lot of ways," Eetoolook recalled. "But the end results are still there, in the implementation today." But Eetoolook said one of the biggest sacrifices Inuit had to make in order to get the Nunavut Agreement was the much-debated extinguishment clause: surrendering their Aboriginal rights to lands and water. Speaking from his home in Taloyoak, Nunavut, Eetoolook said Inuit have seen their rights taken away in many ways over the years. Speaking of Manji's fraud case, he said people are "always look for loopholes." "They used vulnerable people to gain Inuit status to get funding for their education, for their personal upgrade … and I think that that is wrong," he said. Noah Noah agrees. He was pleased last year when Manji was sentenced to three years in prison, but he still wants her daughters to take some responsibility as well. "I mean, an apology would be, at a minimum, a good thing."

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