
Shocking revelation in adopted man's search for family, identity
A man who recently found his biological father also learned the dark truth about his conception, allegedly the result of sexual abuse at a residential school.
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CTV News
19 minutes ago
- CTV News
Man arrested for alleged armed robbery at Charlottetown pizzeria
A Charlottetown Police Services sign is pictured in this file photo. Police in P.E.I. arrested a 24-year-old for allegedly robbing a Charlottetown pizzeria while wielding a large knife in May. Police say a masked man allegedly entered Jack's Pizza on 330 University Ave. on May 30 and wielded the knife at an employee before stealing cash from the register. There were no reported injuries. Police conducted an investigation and after reviewing security footage, they charged the unnamed suspect with armed robbery. The man was also charged with wearing a mask with the intent to commit an indictable offence. Police say the man was charged with assault with a weapon for an unrelated matter. The man was released on conditions and is set to appear in court on Aug. 21 and Sept. 25. For more P.E.I. news, visit our dedicated provincial page.


CTV News
19 minutes ago
- CTV News
Texas county votes to release Uvalde school shooting records, ending legal battle
Reggie Daniels pays his respects at a memorial at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas created to honour the victims killed in the recent school shooting on June 9, 2022. (Eric Gay / AP Photo) HOUSTON — Leaders of the county where 19 students and two teachers were killed in the 2022 shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, voted Monday to release records related to the massacre, ending a yearslong legal battle over disclosure of the information. Uvalde County commissioners voted 2-1 to release the records and to stop appealing a 2022 lawsuit that a group of media organizations, including The Associated Press, had filed seeking to make the information public. The decision by commissioners came a week after the Uvalde district's school board voted to release its records related to the deadly rampage, one of the worst school shootings in U.S. history. The group of media organizations had sued both the county and the school district for the release of the records. County commissioners and the school district voted to release the records after a Texas appeals court on July 16 upheld a judge's ruling that had ordered the information be made public. Both the county and the school district have not said when the records will be released. 'For me, the appellate court's decision to uphold (the judge's) ruling to hand over the video coverage was just confirmation for me that … what are we hiding?' Uvalde County Commissioner Ronald Garza told AP after Monday's meeting. 'I'm very happy that we're gonna release the information.' One county commissioner, Mariano Pargas Jr., who was the acting police chief on the day of the school shooting, abstained from the vote. Family members of the victims had also pushed to make the records public. Jesse Rizo, the uncle of 9-year-old victim Jackie Cazares, asked commissioners on Monday to release the records. Rizo is also a member of the school board. During the board's July 21 meeting, he apologized for the delay in releasing the records. 'Will it answer everything? No. Will it give you closure? I don't think anything ever will give you that type of closure. Will it hopefully make you heal or allow you to heal? I pray that it does,' Rizo said last week. Records from the county that are expected to be released include incident and 911 reports concerning Robb Elementary and other locations; video footage; ballistics and evidence logs; and reports of law enforcement interactions with the shooter and his mother. Records from the school district expected to be released include body-worn and security camera footage from Robb Elementary; student files for the shooter; and records involving Pete Arredondo, the former Uvalde schools police chief who was later indicted over his role in the slow response to the shooting. Arredondo and former school officer Adrian Gonzales have pleaded not guilty to multiple charges of child abandonment and endangerment. They are set to face trial on Oct. 20. Several officers involved, including Arredondo, were fired, and separate investigations by the Department of Justice and state lawmakers faulted law enforcement for botching their response to the massacre. Uvalde city officials released their records in August 2024. The Texas Department of Public Safety is still fighting a separate lawsuit filed by media organizations for the release of that agency's records related to the school shooting. Juan A. Lozano, The Associated Press


CTV News
19 minutes ago
- CTV News
Calgarian who failed to provide a breathalyser sample says she's never drank, was injured
A Calgary woman charged after she was unable to provide a breathalyser sample says she was injured at the time and has never once drank. Now, she's fighting the expensive and humiliating charge. Pam Lacusta was pulled over for speeding by a police officer in an unmarked vehicle on 114 Avenue near Stoney Trail S.E., just after 11:30 a.m. on April 24. 'I rolled down my window and [the officer] said, 'I am going to conduct a breathalyzer on you,' said Lacusta. 'Immediately, I thought to myself, 'What? Why?'' Lacusta is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and doesn't drink. 'Part of my religion is abstinence from alcohol and drugs, and I have never partaken in either of these in my life,' she said. After 30 attempts to provide a breathalyser sample, Lacusta was charged with an Immediate Roadside Sanction Fail (IRS Fail). 'Every time I was able to just get a good blow in or a good breath in, he would yank it out and he would say, 'Your teeth are in the way,' 'Your tongue is in the way,' 'You're trying to manipulate the test,'' Lacusta said. 'I have never seen a breathalyzer, I do not know how to do it.' Lacusta's charge, under the Traffic Safety Act, alleges she 'failed or refused, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a demand made on [her].' Her license was suspended for 90 days, and her vehicle was impounded for 30. She had to pay $1,600 to get it out of the impound lot. Following her 90-day licence suspension, Lacusta needs to take a Planning Ahead course from the Alberta Motor Association, which costs $400 and takes a year to complete. She will also need to get a breathalyser installed in her vehicle – costing $115 per month – and her insurance will no longer cover her. 'I am being treated like I was a drunk driver,' she complained. 'This has been a small nightmare, I do not wish this on anyone.' Lacusta says she was able to produce a clean urine sample immediately after the incident, and called a lawyer the following day. With her lawyer's help, she appealed her charge with the Safe Roads Appeal Committee. However, it was denied by an adjudicator as they sided with the officer and disputed her independent lab results showing her sobriety through a urine test. Doug King, a criminal justice professor at Mount Royal University says Lacusta would have had a minimum of 14 days to collect documentation and provide it to an adjudicator. Lacusta says when she met with a doctor in early June, more than a month after the incident, to determine if there was something medically wrong with her that would have prevented her from being able to provide a breath sample. She discovered she had two broken ribs, which she says dated back to a fall that happened on April 1. 'The onus falls on the person who has to provide the documentation to get it done or to get legal representation to help you through it,' King said. 'It's a tragic situation.' 'The process is that you can have a hearing, in which you can provide evidence of a reasonable excuse. She failed to do that.' Lacusta has a court date scheduled for September 2026. CTV News has reached out to the Ministry Justice and is waiting to hear back.