logo
5 men from Manitoba among more than 100 arrested in national online child sexual exploitation bust

5 men from Manitoba among more than 100 arrested in national online child sexual exploitation bust

Yahoo08-03-2025

At least five men in Manitoba have been arrested as part of a major online child sexual exploitation operation that led to 106 arrests across Canada.
The recent sweep, dubbed Project Steel, brought together 63 law enforcement partners from different Canadian jurisdictions between Feb. 17 and 28.
Dozens of victims were identified and 37 children were safeguarded from harm, RCMP Insp. Matthieu Girard told reporters at a news conference earlier this week.
Three men in Winnipeg were arrested as part of Project Steel, a police spokesperson told CBC News on Friday.
A search at a home on the 100 block of Furby Street, south of Broadway, led to the seizure of 50 electronic devices and the first arrest on Feb. 19, Winnipeg police said.
A 67-year-old man was arrested and charged with possessing, accessing and making child pornography.
A second search warrant was executed at a home on the 300 block of Scotia Street, in the Seven Oaks neighbourhood, which led to the seizure of 10 electronics and the arrest of a 28-year-old man on Feb. 28. He has since been charged with possessing and accessing child pornography.
A third man, in his 30s, was arrested on Feb. 26 after officers searched a residence in the city's downtown.
Arrests were also made in Brandon as part of Project Steel, where police executed five search warrants and discovered evidence of possession of child pornography and its distribution, import or sale, according to a Brandon police news release earlier this week.
An 18-year-old man and a 20-year-old man were charged, while two other investigations continue, police said.
A spokesperson for the Manitoba RCMP said the force has numerous investigations ongoing, but RCMP have not yet made any arrests here in connection with Project Steel.
Lianna McDonald , the executive director of the Winnipeg-based Canadian Centre for Child Protection, told CBC News in a statement the nationwide investigation is critical policing work, but the bust speaks to a larger issue, as the majority of the arrests happened after online services reported suspected illegal content to the authorities.
"The problem is that currently, content moderation or any other safety requirements are entirely voluntary. Not all online services do it, and some have even announced a scaling down in doing so," McDonald's statement said.
"This is, yet again, another example of why Canada needs its own online safety laws."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jared Leto Denies Report of Inappropriate Sexual Conduct Allegations by 9 Women
Jared Leto Denies Report of Inappropriate Sexual Conduct Allegations by 9 Women

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Jared Leto Denies Report of Inappropriate Sexual Conduct Allegations by 9 Women

Nine women have accused Leto of inappropriate conduct in an exposé published by Air Mail, including a strong denial from unnamed reps for the actor and 30 Seconds to Mars frontman. Some of the women noted in the Graydon Carter-backed weekly newsletter's Saturday report say they were underage when the actor allegedly engaged in sexually charged conversations or made forceful advances on them. U.S.-based spokespeople for Leto did not immediately return messages seeking comment. Rumors about Leto's behavior toward young and underage women go back to at least 2005, when the New York Post published a story that began, 'Jared Leto likes 'em young.' The actor was allegedly caught hitting on teen models staying at the Maritime Hotel. One woman Clavarino spoke to said Leto asked for her number when she was 16. He called her days later. 'I don't know if he was on drugs or what … It was the weirdest, grossest voice … [But] for me, it's Jared, you know? … And the conversations turned sexual. He'd ask things like, 'Have you ever had a boyfriend? Have you ever [expletives]?' Model Laura La Rue also said she had a similar experience with Leto when she was 16. 'He asked how old I was. I said, 'I'm 16. How old are you?' she explained. Leto was then 36. A third woman explained she was 20 when she met Leto while out. 'We ended up hooking up a little at the club,' she told the outlet, and 'hung out a few times at his house, but he was weird. Look, I know some people are kinky, and that's fine. But his kind of kink — it just didn't feel right.' The actor also allegedly threw parties in 2007 and 2008 and 'recruited' young women to attend. 'I was 18 the first time I went, and I was definitely not the youngest person there,' a woman told Clavarino. 'The energy was all about getting the girls in the pool.' In May Los Angeles-based DJ Allie Teilz shared a Facebook status from 2012 in her Instagram Stories. 'Youre [sic] not really in L.A. until Jared Leto tries to force himself on you backstage … In a kilt … And a snow hat,' she wrote more than a decade ago. 'I was assaulted and traumatized by this creep when I was 17,' she wrote in another Instagram story. 'He knew my age and didn't care. What he did was predatory, terrifying and unacceptable.' 'Throwback to 2012, Jared Leto was a creep then … still a creep now, going on 15+ years of being Hollywood's most persistent predator in a kilt.' And another: '29+ years of being a pedophile. when does this end? protect our girls #jaredleto,' she also wrote. 'Let me be clear,' Teilz wrote in another Instagram story. 'What he's done is not OK: the sheer volume of these cases—and how young some of these girls were, just 14, 15, 16—breaks my heart.' Read the entire report at Air Mail. The post Jared Leto Denies Report of Inappropriate Sexual Conduct Allegations by 9 Women appeared first on TheWrap.

Mass. man who supplied gang with ‘particularly dangerous' drugs began drinking, smoking at 13
Mass. man who supplied gang with ‘particularly dangerous' drugs began drinking, smoking at 13

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Mass. man who supplied gang with ‘particularly dangerous' drugs began drinking, smoking at 13

At just 13, a Massachusetts boy turned to alcohol and marijuana. By 15, he was hooked on heroin. Now, three decades later, the scars of that addiction run deep — and at 39, he's been sentenced to federal prison for his role in a Massachusetts-based drug ring. Brian Gingras, also known as 'Cheech,' was sentenced June 4 to nine years in prison. Gringas pleaded guilty in January to conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute 50 grams and more of methamphetamine. Gingras' 'first encounter with the criminal justice system was in 2003, when he was 17 years old. The next 20 years of Defendant's life would be an uninterrupted parade of arrests and criminal court cases,' court documents state. 'Most of these cases did not result in convictions, but the records illustrate in stark relief Defendant's unwillingness or inability to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.' Read more: How one machine supercharged illicit drug manufacturing in Mass. In 2019, Gingras' parents bought him a home. Three years later, investigators searched that home 'finding substantial evidence of Defendant's crimes.' Investigators also said the 'unkempt home' was 'in disarray.' 'Drugs were found in nearly every room of the house, some of which were clearly being used,' court documents state. 'Defendant himself appeared to be in distress, and he was removed from the scene in an ambulance.' Thousands of 'particularly dangerous imitations' of Adderall pills that were supplied by a Massachusetts gang looked like the real pills but were filled with a compound of methamphetamine and caffeine. The pills had become increasingly popular and prevalent in Lowell. They were similar in shape, size, and appearance to genuine Adderall but were typically pressed with methamphetamine by local drug traffickers using pill presses, court documents state. Gingras was the source of the pills and other drugs, such as cocaine and counterfeit 'Xanax bars,' to the Asian Boyz gang, according to court documents. He was distributing wholesale quantities of cocaine and various illicit pills. He had all the equipment necessary to produce the pills himself, including an industrial pill press, which is legal in the U.S. The machines are largely unregulated and available for purchase online. In the garage, officials found a broken pill press covered in drug residue. Historically, pill presses were used in the pharmaceutical profession and by people who make their own dietary supplements, such as bodybuilders or naturopaths. Read more: A Mass. man bought an illegal depressant online and took his life. The seller will go to prison Gingras also maintained a large quantity of the drugs at a commercial storage facility, court documents state. Inside the storage unit, officials found 250 grams of methamphetamine pills, over 1 kilogram of etizolam pills, bags of suspected marijuana, boxes of THC extract and edible products and over 30 kilograms of caffeine pills that looked identical to the counterfeit 'Adderall' pills made with methamphetamine. Bill Phim, also known as 'Bonez,' of the Asian Boyz gang, told an undercover officer that he coordinated the supply of methamphetamine pills with other Asian Boyz gang members and associates, including Gingras. Between May 2022 and September 2022, officials said Gingras met with Phim prior to planned deals to personally deliver pills. In total, Gingras supplied Phim with about 5,200 pills during this time period, consisting of over 1.6 kilograms (3.5 pounds) of methamphetamine, court documents read. Gingras sold the pills for about $1 per pill. 'Phim, in turn, re-sold the pills to the undercover officer for a significant profit, at the price of $3.50 per pill,' court documents read. Phim, 37, of Lowell, was sentenced to 10 years in prison. He will then be on five years of supervised release. Read more: Will Mass. lawmakers take action on illicit drug-making machines? Public comment sought. Between February 2022 and April 2022, Erickson Dao, also known as 'Silent,' 32, of Lowell, delivered the counterfeit pills to Phim at least five times. Phim then sold the pills to an undercover federal agent for more than $11,000. On 12 different dates in 2022, Phim sold these counterfeit 'Adderall' pills to an undercover agent. In total, Phim sold the undercover agent over 10,000 pills for more than $36,000. Chemical testing confirmed that the pills were a dangerous compound of methamphetamine and caffeine. When investigators searched Dao's residence, they discovered thousands more counterfeit 'Adderall' pills and large quantities of cocaine. Gingras was seen making 'brief visits' to the back door of Dao's house, 'where Dao routinely engaged in drug transactions,' court documents state. Dao was sentenced to more than seven years in prison. He will then be on four years of supervised release. Read more: We bought a machine that makes fentanyl pills. It wasn't hard Gingras said he was not part of the Asian Boyz gang. However, court documents state he was highly associated with them, including knowing one of the leaders. After the seizure of the drugs, investigators suspected that they had completely disrupted Gingras drug operation. Over Facebook Messenger, another suspected Asian Boyz gang member Samnang Son, or 'Smiley,' told Gingras that he was 'poor.' Gingras responded, 'Me too. I went from balling to crawling.' 'Defendant's response was revealing, capturing his state of mind in the immediate aftermath of the demise of his own illicit drug operation,' court documents read. When officials went to arrest Gingras the next day, they found him at a location in Lowell that is 'frequented by drug addicts and known as a place to obtain and use illicit drugs.' Read more: Hidden in plain sight: Where pill presses have been uncovered in Mass. Court documents state his addiction and mental health issues were considered when deciding his sentence. However, court documents state, 'this case suggests that Defendant even embraced a life of crime.' Officials hopes the nine years in prison gives Gingras 'significant opportunity to participate in the programming available,' including Bureau of Prison's Residential Drug Abuse Program. Netflix movie with well-known comedians needs paid background actors How pink heart shaped fentanyl led to Mass. father's 18-year prison sentence Botulism cases linked to Botox injections under investigation in Massachusetts ICE deportation blocked by Boston judge: Migrants now in shipping container in Djibouti Mass. State Lottery winner: Father will take children to Disney with $100K prize Read the original article on MassLive.

Travis Decker was on ‘brink of something really extreme' before daughters were killed: Court docs
Travis Decker was on ‘brink of something really extreme' before daughters were killed: Court docs

New York Post

time6 hours ago

  • New York Post

Travis Decker was on ‘brink of something really extreme' before daughters were killed: Court docs

Travis Decker was clearly on 'the brink of something really extreme' in the weeks before he allegedly slaughtered his three little girls, new court documents show. The still-on-the-loose homeless veteran's escalating behavior became so concerning that his ex-wife — who has since said Decker is more a 'broken'' man than a cold-blooded killer — hurriedly filed a protection order petition against the accused killer. 'He had seemed better, then it seemed like things just started happening one after another,' Whitney Decker wrote in the documents, obtained by 3 Travis Decker was 'on the brink of something extreme' before he allegedly killed his daughters, according to court documents. Chelan County Sheriff's Office The cracks in Decker's psyche were reportedly showing at his workplace, where he faced bullying and isolation from his colleagues. His supervisor became so concerned with Decker's mental state, he called Whitney to warn of Travis' declining health. 'His boss told him or told me that he had talked to Travis on Friday and he seemed like he was on the brink of something really extreme,' according to the petition. Around a month before the murders, the accused killer abruptly ended his daily counseling calls he had been holding with a Georgia pastor — some of which includedconversations which lasted several hours, the documents reveal. 3 Paityn, Evelyn, and Olivia Decker were found dead with plastic bags over their heads and their wrists zip-tied. Provided by Cozart Law About a week before the tragedy, Decker was involved in a car wreck that seemingly triggered even worse behavior. Decker called his daughters — Paityn, 9, Evelyn, 8, and Olivia, 5 — after the crash and eerily warned 'he was going to jail,' before turning up on the family's doorstep hours later to apologize. All the while, Decker apparently made attempts to reconcile relationships with his brother and father, and attempted to rekindle his romance with Whitney. 'Last week he tried to reconcile our marriage and had even made comments to the girls about him moving back in, and I rejected his advancements,' Whitney wrote in the petition. 3 Decker is still on the loose. AP Decker allegedly cracked last week and killed the three girls during their court-ordered visit with him, which he was granted every other weekend. The bodies of the girls were then found June 2 with plastic bags over their heads and their wrists zip-tied, not far from their father's abandoned truck in a remote campground about 170 miles of the Canadian border. Preliminary investigations indicate the sisters likely died from asphyxiation. Decker was still in the wind Saturday. Authorities have more than 100 law enforcement personnel involved in the search and were fielding more than 500 tips as they hunted for Decker, according to KOMO News. The missing dad apparently searched 'how to relocate to Canada' before allegedly carrying out the horrifying crime. Police have warned the public not to try contacting or approaching Decker and do not know if he is armed. A $20,000 reward is being offered for information leading to his arrest.

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