logo
Widow of Elora-man killed by impaired driver reacts to suspect's sentencing

Widow of Elora-man killed by impaired driver reacts to suspect's sentencing

CTV News16-07-2025
The driver responsible for a fatal 2023 crash on Highway 6, near Guelph, has learned his fate. CTV's Karis Mapp has reaction from David Generaux's widow.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Victoria police investigating antiisemitic graffiti at 'oldest synagogue in Western Canada'
Victoria police investigating antiisemitic graffiti at 'oldest synagogue in Western Canada'

CBC

time3 minutes ago

  • CBC

Victoria police investigating antiisemitic graffiti at 'oldest synagogue in Western Canada'

Social Sharing Police are investigating an incident involving antisemitic graffiti at a Victoria synagogue that a rabbi says has left the congregation in shock. The incident at Congregation Emanu-El Synagogue, a place of worship that has stood at the corner of Blanshard and Pandora in the city's downtown since 1863, has drawn condemnations from politicians, Jewish groups and the synagogue's rabbi. Photos on social media show a message handwritten in black, capital letters scrawled near an entrance to the synagogue. "It was really a message of real hate," Rabbi Harry Brechner said on Wednesday, recalling what was written. "That they would get their revenge; they were calling us evil and baby killers and all of that kind of stuff. It was pretty harsh." Victoria police say they were called to the synagogue on Saturday. Brechner said a congregant found the message next to a set of doors during a busy day, with worship services and a bar mitzvah. The police department said in a statement said its officers then "documented the graffiti, collected evidence, and then worked with [the] City of Victoria to have it removed." They are encouraging anyone with information about it to contact them. Politicians decry message The graffiti drew rebukes from politicians like Victoria Mayor Marianne Alto, Public Safety Minister Nina Kreiger and Premier David Eby. "I am saddened and disappointed to hear of the racist and antisemitic graffiti that was left on the Congregation Emanu-El building this weekend," Alto's statement read. According to the Jewish Federation of Greater Vancouver, 62 per cent of Jewish British Columbians have experienced at least one antisemitic incident since the Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel. "Even things between the pro-Palestinian demonstrators and the synagogue, they've been really cordial. People have been pretty respectful. So this sort of changed that," he said.

Chilliwack, B.C., man found not criminally responsible for wife's stabbing death
Chilliwack, B.C., man found not criminally responsible for wife's stabbing death

CBC

time33 minutes ago

  • CBC

Chilliwack, B.C., man found not criminally responsible for wife's stabbing death

The B.C. Supreme Court says a Chilliwack, B.C., man who stabbed his wife to death in 2024 was suffering from a "delusional belief" when the violent killing occurred, finding him not criminally responsible for her murder. The court ruling posted online Wednesday says the man, now 70, killed his wife, while believing he was "saving her" from being tortured or raped by people who were targeting the couple. CBC News is not naming the man, nor his wife, due to a court-ordered publication ban. The ruling says the husband worked as a machinist and had become "preoccupied" with concerns about not getting paid from his job, and began acting in unusual and paranoid ways in the lead-up to the killing. The ruling says the couple lived with their adult son, who had called police over his father's "bizarre behaviour" on Jan. 8 and Jan. 12, 2024, but officers determined he didn't meet the criteria to be apprehended "under the Mental Health Act because nobody indicated he presented an immediate risk to himself or anyone else." The court ruling says the man attacked his wife with a knife on Jan. 17, stabbing her before being taken to the ground by his son. She called police in "extreme distress," telling the call-taker that her husband was mentally ill and "trying to kill everybody." The ruling says the man broke free of his son's grasp and got another knife, slashing his wife's throat and cutting his son, who had tried to protect her. A judge found he had a mental disorder that included "delusional beliefs" that rendered him "incapable of knowing that his actions were morally wrong."

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