logo
Motorcyclist stopped going 206 km/h on Gatineau highway

Motorcyclist stopped going 206 km/h on Gatineau highway

CTV News13-05-2025

A Surete du Quebec police car is seen at their headquarters in Montreal on September 10, 2024. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi) (Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Father in Brandon's manslaughter trial found guilty in infant 2016 death
Father in Brandon's manslaughter trial found guilty in infant 2016 death

CBC

time24 minutes ago

  • CBC

Father in Brandon's manslaughter trial found guilty in infant 2016 death

A Manitoba father has been found guilty of manslaughter in the death of his two-month-old daughter nearly a decade ago. Keifer Mecas, 34, was home alone watching his 11-week-old Haelin Taylor on Jan. 4. 2016, when she went into medical distress in Sioux Valley Dakota Nation, about 40 kilometres west of Brandon, Man. Haelin was rushed to hospital in critical condition but died nearly three weeks later on Jan. 23. Police deemed her death a homicide. Both parents were initially questioned by police. Charges were laid against Mecas seven years later in 2023, after multiple witnesses came forward in 2022 alleging he had confessed to harming Haelin. The judge-only trial began in April. On June 4, Court of King's Bench Justice Scott Abel found Mecas guilty of manslaughter. In his oral decision, he cited witness testimony placing Mecas alone with his daughter when the injuries occurred, as well as medical expert evidence outlining the nature of Haelin's injuries. "I've determined that the cause of death was the application of significant force in an acceleration-deceleration event," Abel told the court. "The injuries were not progressive but rather were caused at the same time ... when the accused was the only adult in the residence with Haelin. "I am satisfied that the accused caused the injuries to Haelin by the significant application of force." While the case relied on circumstantial evidence, the judge ruled it was reasonable to infer that Mecas inflicted the injuries that led to Haelin's death. He ruled the Crown had proven beyond a reasonable doubt that Mecas's action – applying violent force – directly contributed to Haelin's death. The court found that Mecas had committed an unlawful act by assaulting the infant, using force that was well beyond what would be considered normal handling of a baby. The injuries were deemed dangerous and foreseeable, meeting the legal threshold for manslaughter, Abel said. At the trial, the defence suggested an alternative scenario in which Haelin had stopped breathing on her own, possibly due to choking. In a separate 2018 statement, Mecas told police Haelin had been vomiting and struggling to breathe, prompting him to perform CPR with light chest compressions, But, Justice Abel rejected that account stating it could not explain the severity of Haelin's injuries — including trauma to her brain, eyes and spinal cord. "Even if I were to accept that Haelin stopped breathing first and the accused shook Haelin to revive her that explanation still does not create a reasonable doubt regarding the cause of death," he said. Abel's decision repeatedly noted that medical experts testified that the injuries were consistent with significant acceleration and deceleration consistent with violent shaking. A doctor had also examined Haelin one month before the incident and confirmed she was a healthy baby at the time. "I accept their evidence that the cause of death was hypoxic-ischemic brain damage due to a traumatic brain injury," Abel said. "The trauma to Haelin's brain caused her heart to stop breathing resulting in a lack of oxygen and blood to her brain." Abel requested a Gladue Report — which explains an Indigenous person's history, their family's history and their community's history to the courts, in order to take the individual's unique circumstances and challenges into consideration — before Mecas is sentenced in July.

Assaults drive rise in crimes against the person in Montreal: annual report
Assaults drive rise in crimes against the person in Montreal: annual report

CTV News

time40 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Assaults drive rise in crimes against the person in Montreal: annual report

Montreal police (SPVM) are investigating after a man, 30, was stabbed in Saint-Laurent on April 17, 2025. Another man, 40, was arrested. (Scott Prouse / CTV Montreal) The Montreal police service (SPVM) recorded a rise in overall crime last year, partly due to an increase of assaults and hate-motivated crimes, but say the force saw improvements when it comes to gun crime and vehicle thefts. The overall number of Criminal Code offences rose by 3.4 per cent last year, according to the 2024 SPVM annual report released on Monday. Comparing 2024 to the previous year, crimes against the person were up 7.3 per cent and property crimes rose slightly by 0.4 per cent. Compared to five years ago, the increase in crimes against the person is up nearly 28 per cent, while property crimes saw an increase of 19.4 per cent from levels seen in 2019. The biggest category driving the increase in crimes against the person was assault, a trend that predates the pandemic and has continued upward. The report highlighted that the increase last year can be attributed to level 1 assaults, which means little or no injury to the victim. Assaults rose another consecutive year in 2024, jumping to 19,159 (6.8 per cent) compared to the previous year. 'Although armed violence is still present in the Montréal landscape, it is contributing less to the current portrait than it did in recent years,' the SPVM noted in its report. 'One third of the homicides and attempted murders committed in SPVM territory in 2024 involved the presence or use of a firearm … while these weapons represented half of the homicides and 60% of the attempted murders committed in 2022.' For the first time since 2020, the force recorded a decrease in firearm offences after seeing a drop of 12.9 per cent in 2024. Gun crimes had been rising steadily over the last three years, reaching a five-year peak (518 incidents) in 2023. The SPVM report also showed that the number of crimes against persons involving the presence or use of a firearm in 2024 decreased 6.3 per cent compared to the average of the last five years, and 5.3 per cent compared to 2023. Firearm discharge events also decreased by 5.2 per cent compared to 2023. The SPVM expanded its ant-gun squad, EMAF, last year to all four regions of the city. 'With the mission to prevent individuals engaging in high-risk armed violence behaviours from doing harm (repressive aspect) while offering individuals and their circles alternatives to violence, drawing on the collaboration of community and institutional actors (preventive aspect), the SPVM's Collectives strategy has now been extended across the organization,' the report stated. Domestic violence, sexual assaults According to the report, 21 per cent of all crimes against persons reported in Montreal were related to domestic violence, while homicides remained stable at 31 again last year. Sexual assaults also increased 8.5 per cent from 2023, or 12.6 per cent compared to the average of the past five years. 'This increase is mainly related to an increase in cases of the non-consensual distribution of intimate images and sexual contact,' police said in the annual report. 'Interpreting the increase or decrease in the number of sexual offences is always difficult because they are among the offences least reported to police by the victims. The significant increase observed following the end of the pandemic shows that the population is more aware but also demonstrates a bond of trust between victims and the various players in the judicial system.' More hate crimes reported Meanwhile, there were more hate crimes and hate incidents last year, with increases of 6.2 per cent and 18.1 per cent, respectively, particularly those based on ethnicity, national origin, or skin colour, according to the report. Police noted that officers responded to 300 demonstrations and 630 'crowd control situations' related to the Israel-Hamas war. Marc Charbonneau, deputy chief of specialized service, told CTV News that Montreal police have forwarded more than 70 files to the Quebec Crown prosecution office since the start of the war in Gaza on Oct. 7, 2023. Police also say they are coordinating their response to the rise in extortion attempts targeting local businesses owners, including visits to hundreds of businesses urging them to report all extortion attempts. There has been a wave of firebombings and gun violence targeting restaurants in recent months, with gangs demanding protection money from owners. If the owners refuse to pay up, criminals threaten, firebomb, or shoot at their businesses. On May 30, six suspects broke into a cafe in Old Montreal and set fire to it, causing significant damage. Investigators believe the intended target was a bar next door. last week, police made 13 arrests related to extortion attempts. Charbonneau told CTV News that the SPVM has the resources it needs to combat this phenomenon, saying multiple units are involved in investigating this type of crime, from organized crime squads to patrol officers. 'We reach [out], we go to encounter, to meet all those [owners] that can be reached … and we ask them to talk to us,' he said Monday. 'We want them to be confident in us, and we will be with them to fight that. So what we ask for [owners] is not to answer the demands of those kinds of people.' The annual report also highlighted success when it comes to combating car theft, noting a drop of 25 per cent.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store