logo
Sentencing hearing begins for Freedom Convoy leaders Lich, Barber

Sentencing hearing begins for Freedom Convoy leaders Lich, Barber

Article content
Barber is appearing virtually due to the sudden death of one of his parents, while Lich is attending in person.
Article content
Article content
Dozens of people have filled the courtroom to watch the proceedings.
Article content
Two days have been set aside for the parties to present their sentencing submissions.
Article content
Article content
The Crown is seeking a prison sentence of seven years for Lich and eight years for Barber, who also was convicted of counselling others to disobey a court order.
Article content
Article content
Lich and Barber were key figures behind the convoy protest that occupied downtown Ottawa for three weeks beginning in late January 2022 to protest vaccine mandates and other pandemic measures.
Article content
The protest ended after the federal government invoked the Emergencies Act for the first time ever. The convoy was cleared out of Ottawa's downtown core in a three-day police operation that began on Feb. 18.
Ontario Court Justice Heather Perkins-McVey said she found Lich and Barber guilty of mischief because they routinely encouraged people to join or remain at the protest, despite knowing the adverse effects it was having on downtown residents and businesses.
Article content
Barber also was found guilty of counselling others to disobey a court order for telling people to ignore a judge's injunction directing convoy participants to stop honking their truck horns. Lich was not charged with that offence.
Article content
Article content
In a separate Ottawa-based trial for Pat King, another convoy leader, the Crown sought a sentence of 10 years in prison for mischief and disobeying a court order.
Article content
King was sentenced in February to three months of house arrest, 100 hours of community service at a food bank or men's shelter and a year of probation.
Article content
He received nine months credit for time served before his conviction.
Article content
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre criticized the Crown's sentencing proposals for Lich and Barber. In a social media post Monday, Poilievre compared the sentencing range to sentences for other crimes and asked, 'How is this justice?'
Article content
While it's quite rare for elected officials to comment directly on a sentencing hearing, Poilievre's message was echoed by several other prominent Conservatives.
Article content
Deputy Conservative leader Melissa Lantsman called the Crown's proposed sentence 'political vengeance not actual justice.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ottawa police constable demoted for 18 months following sexual harassment hearing
Ottawa police constable demoted for 18 months following sexual harassment hearing

CTV News

time2 hours ago

  • CTV News

Ottawa police constable demoted for 18 months following sexual harassment hearing

An Ottawa Police Service constable has been demoted for 18 months after pleading guilty to making sexually suggestive comments to a colleague and slapping her buttocks. Const. Charles Benoit was found guilty of two counts of discreditable conduct, according to a discipline hearing report on the Ottawa Police Service's website. According to the agreed statement of facts, the first count of discreditable conduct revolves around text messages Benoit sent to a colleague, identified in the report only as 'AA' to protect her privacy. On March 27, 2023, Benoit texted AA and asked if she was at work. She said she was at the gym, to which Benoit replied 'Ok. We'll come c you. You sweating yet. I'm not going in till ur sweating.' AA replied 'Drenched.' On May 3, 2023, Benoit texted AA to ask if she could take a call. AA responded that she required five minutes to kit up for her shift. Constable Benoit responded, 'Np. Was thinking I'd catch you all sweaty again,' with a smiley face emoji. Later that same day, Benoit texted AA about a Facebook Marketplace listing of leather motorcycle chaps. Benoit wrote, 'Bumm must be supper nice in this.' AA responded 'lol' and 'that the chaps still fit', prompting Constable Benoit to state that he would need 'proof of that.' AA replied 'bahaha…I am decluttering.' Constable Benoit replied with two emojis. The report stated that AA described the messages in her compelled interview as unwelcome and inappropriate and were 'interpreted as an invitation to send a senior constable a picture of her buttocks.' Benoit said the comments were meant 'in a joking matter' but acknowledged they were 'clearly inappropriate.' On Sept. 12, 2023, Benoit texted 'heard you had a new gf. You still not coming back to this side. Just jump on our side for a little.' The report says AA is a member of the 2SLGBTQQIA+ community and that AA's sexuality is known to Benoit. AA said she perceived the comment related to 'sides' in relation to her sexual orientation. The second count of discreditable conduct revolves around an incident that took place on Sept. 23, 2023, after the Canadian Police Memorial Ride to Remember event. According to the agreed statement of facts, AA was outside her vehicle following the event when Benoit parked his vehicle nearby and began talking to her. After the conversation, AA was speaking to her partner and daughter in their car, at which point Benoit approached her from behind and slapped her left buttock, creating 'an audibly loud noise,' the report states. AA described the slap as 'hard', according to the report. Four days later, Benoit texted, 'Oh and sorry for slapping ur ass the other day. I didn't know that was your gf, and on a flip side. That was a nice hard bum. Congrats,' followed by the thumbs up and OK emojis. 'Constable Benoit acknowledged in his compelled interview that he was aware of OPS's policies on Violence and Harassment in the Workplace and Respectful Workplace. Constable Benoit acknowledged that his conversations with AA, which were intended to be a joke, were inappropriate,' the report says. 'Constable Benoit acknowledged in the same interview that his physical conduct towards AA, namely the slapping of her left buttocks, was inappropriate and beyond what is reasonable between friends.' The prosecution in the disciplinary hearing sought Benoit's dismissal, while the defence sought a one-year demotion. Retired superintendent Lisa Taylor ordered Benoit demoted to second class constable for 18 months, after which time he will return to the rank of first class constable. 'I find Constable Benoit has the ability to move past this misconduct matter and to re-establish a positive reputation within the workplace and the community. Overall, I find this a strong mitigating consideration,' Taylor wrote. 'I find specific and general deterrence are clearly required and can be served though a strong but fair sanction.' Taylor's decision says she has considered the potential for damage to the Ottawa Police Service's reputation should Benoit remain an officer, but said these incidents, while concerning, do not appear to be reflective of how Benoit has conducted himself over the course of his career, noting several letters of support from colleagues and friends, including numerous women. 'I find the public would be unsettled to learn that Constable Benoit slapped a fellow officer on the buttocks but there would be confidence instilled in the public knowing that the Service has taken the matter seriously and the member has been held accountable for his misconduct,' Taylor wrote. 'The public would recognize that police officers are human too and make errors in judgement. The public and OPS members can be satisfied that the victim(s) in this matter were treated with compassion and respect, and their concerns were immediately addressed while the respondent officer was treated fairly.' Taylor stressed Benoit's actions were unacceptable. 'Constable Benoit's misconduct could not be described as a mistake but a serious lapse in judgement and he ought to have known better. Constable Benoit's strong employment history and letters of support would demonstrate this is out of character for him. Regardless, AA has the right to be treated with respect and to feel safe in the workplace and the offensive comments and physical contact directed at her are completely unacceptable,' Taylor wrote. 'Demotion is a substantial penalty that comes with accompanying negative financial impacts on the officer. The fiscal impact is significant and equates to approximately $20,000 per year, according to defence counsel. However, unlike dismissal, demotion comes with an end date. Constable Benoit must remain cognizant that should he face similar misconduct in the future involving such issues as outlined in the (agreed statement of facts), dismissal as a sanction is not out of the question. In fact, dismissal is a distinct possibility should such misconduct occur in the future.'

Trump's pursuit of meeting with Chinese leader reveals the complex web of US-China relations
Trump's pursuit of meeting with Chinese leader reveals the complex web of US-China relations

Winnipeg Free Press

time4 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Trump's pursuit of meeting with Chinese leader reveals the complex web of US-China relations

WASHINGTON (AP) — China, the adversary. China, the friend? These days, maybe a bit of both. From easing export controls to reportedly blocking the Taiwanese president's plans to travel through the United States, President Donald Trump is raising eyebrows in Washington that he might offer concessions that could hurt U.S. interests in his quest to meet, and reach a deal with, the Chinese leader. There is no firm plan for Trump to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping. But it's widely believed that the men must meet in person, likely in the fall, for the two governments to ink a trade deal, and some are worried that Xi is leveraging Trump's desire for more giveaways. 'The summit mismatch is real. There's a clear gap between Trump's eagerness for a face-to-face with Xi and Beijing's reluctance to engage,' said Craig Singleton, senior director of the China program at the Washington-based think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies. There are concerns that Trump may throttle back on export controls or investment curbs to preserve summit prospects, Singleton said, warning the risk 'isn't just in giving away too much' but also 'in letting Beijing set the tempo.' China-U.S. relations have pinballed often since Washington established relations with communist-led Beijing in 1979. They've hit highs and lows — the latter in the aftermath of the 1989 massacre of pro-democracy protesters in Tiananmen Square, after a 2001 incident involving a U.S. spy plane, during the COVID pandemic and right now. Both countries have struggled to understand each other, which has sometimes gotten in the way of deeper partnerships. And this time around, there's a wild card: the anything-might-happen second presidency of Trump. Disputes often accompany potential US-China leader meetings Efforts by a U.S. president to meet the head of the authoritarian Chinese government have often met with partisan outcries — which happened when former President Joe Biden hosted Xi in California in 2023. But Trump's case is peculiar, partly because he is willing to break with conventional political restraints to make deals and partly because his own party has grown hawkish towards China over national security. 'With President Trump, everything seems to be open for negotiation, and there are few if any red lines,' said Gabriel Wildau, managing director of the global consultancy Teneo. 'The hawks worry that if Trump gets into a room with Xi, he will agree to extraordinary concessions, especially if he believes that a big, beautiful deal is within reach.' While most Republican lawmakers have not voiced their concerns openly, Democrats are vocal in their opposition. 'President Trump is giving away the farm to Xi just so he can save face and reach a nonsensical trade deal with Beijing that will hurt American families economically,' said Rep. Gregory Meeks, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. On Tuesday, Kush Desai, a White House spokesman, said the Trump administration 'has not wavered — and will never waver — in safeguarding our national and economic security to put America first.' 'The administration continues to have productive conversations with China to address longstanding unfair trade practices,' Desai said, adding that export controls on cutting-edge technology and many tariffs remain in place. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, after his latest round of trade negotiations with the Chinese in July, told CNBC that the team was 'very careful to keep trade and national security separate.' And Secretary of State Marco Rubio, appearing on Fox News Radio, said the U.S. remains 'as committed as ever to our partners … in places like Taiwan' but also spoke of the strategic need to keep trade ties with China steady. 'In the end, we have two big, the two largest economies in the world,' Rubio said. 'An all-out trade conflict between the U.S. and China, I think the U.S. would benefit from it in some ways, but the world would be hurt by it.' There's worry over Taiwan Taiwan is concerned that the self-governing island could be 'trade-able' when Trump seeks a deal with Beijing, said Jason Hsu, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and a former legislator in Taiwan. 'Our concern is that, will any of the trade deals lead to concession on political support for Taiwan?' Hsu said, citing the case last month where the White House allegedly blocked a request for Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te to transit through the United States. The U.S. maintains unofficial ties with Taiwan and has always allowed such transits in the past. Experts are worried that the Trump administration is setting a bad precedent, and Democrats have seized on it to criticize Trump. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, the top Democrat on the House Select Committee on China, called the move 'both a sharp break from precedent and another example of the Trump administration caving to China in hopes of reaching a trade deal.' He said the policy decision 'sends a dangerous signal' that Taiwan's democracy is negotiable. Hsu said Taiwan fears that Trump could be coerced or compelled to support the one-China principle, as espoused by Beijing, that acknowledges Beijing's sovereignty claim over the island. There are also concerns that Trump might utter anything in support of 'unification.' That was a request Beijing raised with the Biden administration, though it failed to get a positive response. Now, it's upon Taiwan to persuade Trump to think of the island as 'an economic partner rather than something that he can trade when he negotiates with China,' Hsu said, suggesting that Taiwan step up defense commitments, increase energy procurement, open its market to U.S. companies and invest more in the U.S. But Sun Yun, director of the China program at the Stimson Center, said Trump is bound by the Taiwan Relations Act, a domestic law that obligates the U.S. to maintain an unofficial relationship with the island and provides it with sufficient hardware to deter any invasion by China. 'He can dial the (U.S.-Taiwan) relationship up and down,' Sun said, 'but he can't remove the relationship.' Export controls have been instituted, to mixed results In April, the White House, citing national security, announced it would restrict sales of Nvidia's H20 computer chips to China. The ban was lifted about three months later, when the two governments had climbed down from sky-high tariffs and harsh trade restrictions. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. The decision upset both Republican and Democratic lawmakers. Rep. John Moolenaar, a Michigan Republican who chairs the House Select Committee on China, wrote to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to stress that the U.S. cannot let the Chinese Communist Party 'use American chips to train AI models that will power its military, censor its people, and undercut American innovation.' In Stockholm, Bessent pushed back at the concern that national security might be compromised. 'We are very diligent,' Bessent said, adding there's an interagency process that involves the National Security Council and the Defense Department for decisions. 'There's nothing that's being exchanged for anything,' Bessent said. Addressing H20 chips specifically, Bessent said they 'are well down' Nvidia's 'technology chips stack.' U.S. companies are banned from selling their most advanced chips to China. That might not be persuasive enough. Teneo's Wildau said China hawks are most worried that the H20 decision could be the beginning of a series of moves to roll back export controls from the Biden era, which were once considered 'permanent and non-negotiable.'

‘Please bring my ring back,' pleads elderly victim of distraction theft in Ottawa
‘Please bring my ring back,' pleads elderly victim of distraction theft in Ottawa

CTV News

time5 hours ago

  • CTV News

‘Please bring my ring back,' pleads elderly victim of distraction theft in Ottawa

A 90-year-old woman says a ring was stolen off her finger in a theft outside an Ottawa retirement residence. CTV's Katie Griffin reports. A 90-year-old Ottawa woman is speaking out after becoming the victim of a distraction theft. 'I looked at my hand and my ring was gone,' said Terry Thompson. Thompson was having a smoke outside the Ogilvie Villa retirement home on Sunday and says she was approached by a woman who told her she wanted to give her her grandmother's jewelry and forcefully put it on her. 'I said, 'I don't want any. You keep it, you wear it,' and all of a sudden she grabbed my hand, put the ring on and then all of a sudden she took it off. I said, 'Take that off,' and she was gone in about a second,' Thompson recalled. Also gone—her aquamarine and diamond ring. 'You know my husband gave me that 1975. He had bought it at Birks,' she said through tears. 'Please bring my ring back.' Terry Thompson ring The aquamarine and diamond ring was a gift from Thompson's husband in 1975. (Courtest: Diane DeCooman) 'I'm sad for my mom, upset,' said Thompson's daughter Diane DeCooman. 'Hopefully they can catch this person.' A picture of the suspect has been posted on the door to the retirement home, asking anyone who sees her to tell management, who will call 911. Suspect poster A picture of the suspect has been posted on the door to the Ogilvie Villa retirement home. Aug. 5, 2025. (Katie Griffin/CTV News Ottawa) Last month Ottawa police asked for help identifying suspects wanted for distraction thefts specifically targeting elderly people. To help protect yourself from this kind of theft police advice to:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store