
Chefs stepping up to feed evacuees
Winnipeg Watch
Chefs in Winnipeg are stepping up to help feed wildfire evacuees, but more help is needed.
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7 minutes ago
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Quebec police suspend search for missing rafter in Grenville-sur-la-Rouge
Quebec provincial police plan to end their search for a 29-year-old woman missing since falling into the Rouge River during a rafting trip on Sunday. Police believe the woman drowned, despite wearing a life jacket and helmet when she fell from the raft for "no apparent reason" on Sunday afternoon. "All signs point to a drowning," Sûreté du Québec spokesperson Marc Tessier told Radio-Canada, speaking in French. Despite an intensive search involving divers, all-terrain vehicles, drones, Jet Skis, a helicopter and staff from the tour operator guiding the whitewater rafting trip, no sign of the woman has been found. Police plan to end the search on Wednesday. The missing woman had been on an excursion run by Rafting Nouveau Monde, which guides about 20,000 clients annually, according to owner Gilles Talbot. He said the company has never had a comparable incident in 45 years in business. The company's operations have been suspended until further notice. "We are focusing all our efforts on the search," Talbot said on Monday. Sunday's trip "was completely normal" before the woman fell from the raft and "never came out," Talbot said. Despite a safety team on the bank per the company's protocol, the woman was never seen again.


CBC
12 minutes ago
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Family of Blue Bomber great Milt Stegall mourns death of son, Chase
The family of CFL Hall of Famer Milt Stegall has issued a statement on the sudden death of his 20-year-old son, Chase. Chase Stegall died Monday morning at his residence at DePaul University in Chicago, where he was a sophomore with the school's soccer team. He was the eldest son of Milt and Darlene, and brother to Collin. "It is with profound sadness that we announce the sudden passing of our beloved son and brother, Chase Hamilton Stegall. Chase lived a life filled with love, kindness, and talent, and his memory will be forever etched in our hearts," the statement says. "We are deeply touched by the outpouring of love and appreciation for Chase and the many gifts he shared throughout his life. Your heartfelt condolences and support mean more than words can express. "As a family, we ask for privacy as we grieve this deeply painful loss." No cause of death has been given. Chase was often seen around the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and their old Polo Park-area stadium in the mid-1990s until the mid-2000s. His dad, Milt, who retired from playing in 2009, was one of the most popular Bombers in team history. He played in blue and gold from 1995-98 before suiting up for the New Orleans Saints but tearing his ACL. He came back to the Bombers from 1999-2008 and put his stamp all over the CFL record books. He was named a division all-star eight times, a league all-star six times and the league's most outstanding player in 2002. He holds virtually every Bombers receiving record and is the CFL all-time leader in career touchdowns with 147. "Chase was a bright and talented young man with a promising future, and his loss is felt deeply across our entire Blue Bombers family," said a statement Monday from Blue Bombers president and CEO Wade Miller, whose career with the Bombers was overlapped by Stegall's. Tributes and condolences have also been expressed by the CFL, the league's TV broadcaster, TSN, the NHL's Winnipeg Jets, and dozens upon dozens of fans on social media. Milt Stegall has been a CFL analyst on TSN's studio panel since his retirement. No details about a memorial service for Chase have been announced. "In this time of grief, we take comfort in knowing how many lives he touched and we will continue to honour Chase's memory with the love and light he brought into the world," the Stegall family statement says.


CBC
15 minutes ago
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Canadian Forces corporal acquitted of sexual assault, forcible confinement charges
A Canadian Forces corporal was found not guilty of forcible confinement and sexual assault Wednesday following a judge-alone trial before the Ontario Court of Justice in Barrie, Ont. Justice Robert Gattrell said in his ruling that he found inconsistencies and credibility issues with the evidence provided by both the accused, Cpl. Oleksii Silin, and the complainant, Elle Jaszberenyi — both of whom testified during the trial. However, Gatrell said that these types of cases do not boil down to "a credibility contest between the complainant and the accused." He said he has to determine whether "the Crown has proven the charges beyond a reasonable doubt." In this case, the Crown did not meet the test, Gattrell said. "Given the credibility concern pertaining to the evidence of the complainant, the court would be wary about grounding convictions on this evidence," said Gattrell. "This is not to say that there was no sexual assault or forcible confinement but rather that the offences have not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt." Jaszberenyi, a former Canadian Forces soldier, claimed Silin forced her into a broom closet on Canadian Forces Base Borden in May 2018. Silin was charged after Jaszberenyi, 60, filed for a private prosecution in October 2022, and the Crown's office in Barrie agreed to take the case. A private prosecution offers a way for the public to try to file charges against someone without a police investigation taking place if they feel a crime has been committed — though it happens rarely. Jaszberenyi decided to go that route after the military refused to prosecute her sexual assault allegation following a 2018 investigation. Her attempts to reopen the case through the Military Police Complaints Commission, a quasi-judicial civilian oversight body, and the Federal Court also failed. The names of sexual assault complainants are generally covered by publication bans during court proceedings. But Jaszberenyi, who is no longer with the Canadian Forces, requested the publication ban be lifted on her name. Stigma from charges lasts 'forever' Silin was emotional with relief and immediately phoned his wife after the verdict, said his lawyer Mitchell Worsoff. "He deserved to be acquitted. I believed him from the beginning," Worsoff said. "He's been suffering from this, having this fear now for well over two years." Worsoff said Silin hopes that now, with the case behind him, he can continue to advance his career with the Canadian Forces. Silin is currently stationed at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown in Oromocto, N.B. Worsoff said that Silin must now work to erase the stigma that the case has attached to his life "You are never compensated for the emotional strife you suffer while this is going on," the lawyer said. "The stigma attached seems to last forever."