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CTV News
35 minutes ago
- CTV News
Driver with 3 children in car caught going 165 km/h on Hwy. 417 in Ottawa
A stunt driver with three children and their spouse inside the car had their vehicle impounded on Sunday, Aug. 10, 2025. (OPS Traffic Escort & Enforcement Unit/X) An out-of-province driver with their spouse and three children in the car had their vehicle impounded for going at dangerously high speeds on Highway 417 in Ottawa. The Ottawa police's traffic escort and enforcement unit says in a post on X that officers spotted the vehicle going 165 km/h near Boundary Road on Sunday. The speed limit in the area is 110 km/h. 'Driving with your spouse and 3 children demands extra care & attention (for obvious reasons),' police said. On Saturday, the traffic unit also caught a driver going 136 km/h on Highway 174 near Trim Road. The speed limit in the area is 80 km/h and is in a construction zone. Police say traffic unit officers continue to focus on catching aggressive drivers and speeders around the city. In Ontario, a stunt driving charge comes with an immediate 30-day licence suspension and 14-day vehicle impound. Convictions can result in a minimum $2,000 fine, an additional one-year licence suspension, six demerit points and a jail term of up to six months.


National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
Man survives several days in B.C. wilderness by 'slurping pond water' and eating 'whatever he could find'
Article content Williams Lake RCMP say 39-year-old Andrew Barber was 'slurping pond water' and 'munched on whatever he could find' to stay alive for several days after his truck had broken down in a remote part of the Cariboo. Article content Staff Sgt. Brad McKinnon says Barber was first reported missing on July 31, and found him on Aug. 8 on forest service past McLeese Lake after an RCMP helicopter had spotted him by his self-made shelter near a rock with the word 'Help' written on it. Article content Article content Article content McKinnon says police officers found Barber with an injured right leg and 'severely dehydrated' before taking him by air to Cariboo Memorial Hospital in Williams Lake, from which he has since been released. Article content Article content McKinnon says he has been told that Barber is 'doing quite well' after his experience, but adds that the outcome 'likely could have been very different' given Barber's lack of clean drinking water. Article content


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Ontario man fined $3,700 for illegal hunting in Algonquin Park
A large bull moose is shown in a marsh in Algonquin Provincial Park on October 5, 2015. (File photo) A man from Pikwakanagan, Ont., has been fined and handed a hunting suspension after pleading guilty to illegally hunting moose and deer in Algonquin Provincial Park. Scott Nerlich was fined $3,700 and prohibited from hunting for two years after admitting to unlawfully harvesting wildlife during the closed season. The charges stemmed from an October 12, 2024, incident when a conservation officer stopped Nerlich's vehicle during routine inspections in the park. conservation officer truck An undated photo of an Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources conservation officer vehicle parked near a town. (File photo/Supplied/Ministry of Natural Resources) 'Through the inspection, it was determined that Nerlich was hunting moose and deer without a licence, during the closed season and while trespassing in Algonquin Provincial Park,' the Ministry of Natural Resources said in a court bulletin Friday. The case was heard by Justice of the Peace Harley D'Août Gervais in Pembroke on April 14, 2025. Province stresses protection of wildlife The Ontario government emphasized its commitment to enforcing hunting regulations to conserve vulnerable species. 'The Ontario government is safeguarding moose and deer populations by ensuring hunters do not hunt in provincial parks during the closed season,' the ministry said in the bulletin. Conservation authorities indicated that this case serves as a reminder that hunting in provincial parks without proper authorization is prohibited. The same day, the ministry also released another court bulletin detailing another man being fined for letting his dogs loose in a protected wildlife area. To report a natural resource problem or provide information about an unsolved case, call the ministry TIPS line toll-free at 1-877-847-7667 or contact Crime Stoppers anonymously. For more information about unsolved cases, click here.