logo
Alberta RCMP seize cocaine, methamphetamine and oxycodone in Edmonton area

Alberta RCMP seize cocaine, methamphetamine and oxycodone in Edmonton area

Article content
Alberta RCMP have seized a number of drugs including cocaine and methamphetamine after executing a search warrant in the Edmonton and surrounding area.
Article content
On July 16, the Alberta community response team executed search warrants on a home in west Edmonton, a storage locker in Sherwood Park and a vehicle located in Edmonton.
Article content
Article content
Police seized 2,946 grams of cocaine, eight grams of methamphetamine, 236 oxycodone tablets, $65,810 Canadian dollars and several cell phones.
Article content
Article content
Article content
Edmonton resident Shadi Almohamad, 22, has been charged with three counts for possession for the purpose of trafficking, possession of proceeds of crime over $5,000 and five counts of breaching a release order. He appeared at the Alberta Court of Justice in Sherwood Park on Wednesday.
Article content
Article content
According to a Tuesday press release, Almohamad was on a release order from being charged with three counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking in February.
Article content
The investigation concludes a week long drug trafficking investigation by the Alberta RCMP 's Community Response Team with the assistance of the Sheriff Investigative Support Surveillance Team, St. Albert RCMP, Red Deer Crime Reduction Team and the Edmonton Police Service.
Article content
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Suspect in Abbotsford laundromat stabbing had previously stabbed paraplegic man
Suspect in Abbotsford laundromat stabbing had previously stabbed paraplegic man

Global News

time15 hours ago

  • Global News

Suspect in Abbotsford laundromat stabbing had previously stabbed paraplegic man

The man accused of stabbing and seriously injuring an Abbotsford, B.C., laundromat owner on Saturday was out of prison, on conditions, for stabbing a paraplegic man multiple times, parole board documents reveal. Timothy Richard Louis Rowley, 40, has been charged with assault with a weapon and aggravated assault in the Aug. 9 incident. Rowley was out of prison on statutory release, a provision in Canadian law that requires that most offenders be released to complete the final third of their sentence under supervision in the community. In a decision applying a variety of conditions on Rowley's release, dated July 10, the Parole Board of Canada revealed more details about the offence that landed him in his most recent bout of prison. 2:02 Suspect charged in Abbotsford stabbing In May 2019, while he was intoxicated, Rowley attempted to use a shoelace to strangle a man who was being interviewed by the police the documents state. Story continues below advertisement He was arrested and released pending a future court date. But nine hours later, he entered the home of a 57-year-old paraplegic man who was watching TV. 'You set fire to his property and then attacked him. You stabbed him repeatedly with a knife. This victim suffered six stab wounds, two rib fractures, and a pneumothorax. This victim spent five days in hospital for treatment,' the document states. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Witness Chelsea McFarlane was at the Maple Ridge apartment building when she interrupted Rowley in the victim's unit. 'I came in to check on him and the place was filled with smoke, and the man was in the living room. And he was, you could tell he wasn't mentally stable, he was saying he wanted to see the smoke,' she said. 'The man had come in and turned on all the burners on his stove and put all his cutting boards, his plastic cutting boards, on the stove.' McFarlane watched as Rowley ran around the apartment and grabbed a knife from the kitchen. 'Steve went in the bedroom to call the police, and he followed him in there and started stabbing him. Steve was saying, 'He's stabbing me, he's stabbing me!'' she added. 'It was a very scary day for everyone.' Story continues below advertisement According to the parole board, the 'victim describes that he defended himself during the attack, that he feared for his life, and that he was subsequently hospitalized for his injuries.' 'The victim expresses significant concern regarding your history of violence and your potential access to the community,' it adds. 'Additional file information notes that this same victim has previously expressed concern about potentially encountering you within the community.' Rowley pleaded guilty to breaking and entering, assault with a weapon and aggravated assault, and was handed a sentence just short of six years. According to the parole board decision, Rowley was paroled twice, both unsuccessfully. 1:44 Abbotsford business owner stabbed 'Your lengthy history of criminal behaviour and poor performance under conditional release clearly indicate that you have significant difficulties controlling/managing your antisocial impulses,' it notes. Story continues below advertisement In 2022, he was granted day parole, which was suspended within a month after he walked away from a residential treatment program. His parole was reinstated in March 2023, and he was directed to live in a community correctional centre because the residential treatment centre wouldn't take him. According to the parole board, this time Rowley breached his conditions multiple times, including testing positive for methamphetamine, fentanyl and cannabis. He later stole a store employee's wallet, then hid in a bathroom and stripped naked. He was re-arrested after trashing someone's trailer. The decision also notes Rowley's problems adhering to regulations while behind bars, noting he tested positive for methamphetamine, admitted to possessing a 'shank,' and was caught with a cell phone he used to coordinate bringing drugs into prison. And it recounted his extensive criminal record, including more than 20 convictions dating back to 2004 for offences including assault causing bodily harm, assaulting a peace officer, vehicle theft, weapons charges, causing unnecessary suffering to an animal and fraud. At the time of Saturday's Abbotsford stabbing, Rowley was wanted by police for being unlawfully at large from his parole jurisdiction. He remains in custody, but McFarlane said he should not have been out in the first place. 'Something needs to change obviously, with the mental health system, the justice system,' she said. Story continues below advertisement 'I think he should be put in a more contained — he shouldn't be out, for sure.'

Police chiefs throw their weight behind Liberals' border and crime bill
Police chiefs throw their weight behind Liberals' border and crime bill

Global News

time16 hours ago

  • Global News

Police chiefs throw their weight behind Liberals' border and crime bill

Canada's 'top cops' are calling on Parliament to quickly pass the federal Liberal government's package of reforms to the Criminal Code, aimed at stiffening border security and expanding police powers. Police chiefs from across the country wrapped their four-day annual summit in Victoria on Tuesday, where they threw full support behind Prime Minister Mark Carney's proposed Bill C-2. Association of Chiefs of Police president Thomas Carrique told reporters that Canadian police are dealing with modern and international threats with 'tools and authorities built for a different era, guided by outdated and inadequate legislation.' 3:02 'Canada must be secure': New border bill gives new powers to CBSA officers, police, postal workers, Health Canada 'It's a public safety imperative. Geopolitical instability fuels transnational organized crime, whether it's human smuggling as well as illicit exportation and importation of drugs, precursors, and firearms,' he said. Story continues below advertisement 'Organized crime groups are taking advantage of systematic blind spots, outdated statutes, and digital platforms to victimize Canadians. And when these gaps go unaddressed, it is police who are left to manage the consequences.' Bill C-2, also known as the Strong Borders Act, proposes sweeping changes to Canada's immigration system, tightening timelines for migrants to make asylum applications and giving the government the power to suspend new applications and the processing of existing claims. The bill would also remove barriers that prevent police from searching mail to advance a criminal investigation, where authorized to do so under the law, and expand Canada Post's inspection authority to open mail. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy The legislation would also make it easier for authorities to access information about internet subscribers, enable the health minister to more rapidly control precursor chemicals that can be used to produce illicit drugs and introduce new restrictions on large cash transactions. And ports of entry, transporters and warehouse operators will be required to allow Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officials to conduct export inspections, matching existing requirements for import inspections. 1:34 Coalition of civil society organizations call for government to scrap Bill C-2 The Canadian Civil Liberties Association joined 39 other organizations in July calling on Ottawa to withdraw the legislation. Story continues below advertisement 'The Bill's privacy eroding elements include a power to demand revealing information without independent authorization from any service provider, could pave the way to expanded international information-sharing agreements, and will empower the government to significantly expand the amount of data police and security agencies can access by compelling digital services to redesign their services,' the coalition said. The coalition says the legislation would allow public officials including police, CSIS and others to demand information from companies without judicial oversight and little proof. 'The government argues this information is innocuous and only includes general details about the nature of the services a company is providing. But in practice law enforcement officials will be able to extract highly revealing information about people with these demands, including whether they've purchased something at any company, interacted with any website, or stayed at any hotel,' the group said. Carrique downplayed those critiques on Tuesday. 'Police are not asking for nor will C-2 provide us with any authorities that we didn't have in a pre-digital world. So we are simply looking to ensure that we have legislation that aligns with technology today, so we can legally with judicial authorization require electronic evidence that has gone beyond our reach right now,' he said. 0:25 Anandasangaree introduces bill aimed at tightening border security, immigration system He further argued that police looking for fentanyl precursor chemicals and 3D printed gun parts are currently handcuffed by legal loopholes that prevent them from getting judicial authorization to search and seize mail sent through Canada Post. Story continues below advertisement Police chiefs Tuesday also called on Ottawa to go further with changes to the bail system. The association said it wants to see the Criminal Code changed to allow for the prolonged detention of chronic offenders who repeatedly commit petty crimes, in addition to similar changes for violent offenders. Outgoing Victoria Police Chief Del Manak said officers are frustrated with repeatedly arresting the same people only to see them released on conditions to offend again while on bail. 'What we're really asking for here is the criminal justice system needs to be strengthened, there must be consequences and a deterrence for those that are carrying out criminal activity every single day,' he said. 'And that's the confidence that we want to give to every citizen, and they deserve that.' In that message, the chiefs have added their voices to a growing chorus that includes B.C.'s own premier and attorney general, along with provincial and federal opposition politicians and numerous mayors. The earliest changes to the Criminal Code could come is the fall legislative sitting.

Canada's laws ‘outdated and inadequate' to fight cross-border crime, head of police chiefs group says
Canada's laws ‘outdated and inadequate' to fight cross-border crime, head of police chiefs group says

Vancouver Sun

time16 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Canada's laws ‘outdated and inadequate' to fight cross-border crime, head of police chiefs group says

VICTORIA — The head of the Canada's police chiefs association says they are guided by 'outdated and inadequate' laws that were never designed to take on the current criminal landscape that no longer respects international borders. Thomas Carrique, president of the Association of Chiefs of Police, said police would have been in a better place to 'disrupt' transnational crime, if the federal government had listened to his group in 2001, when it last proposed legislative changes. 'Across Canada, police are confronting the domestic fallout of international disorder, but we are being asked to do so using tools, and authorities built for a different era, guided by outdated and inadequate legislation that was never designed to address today's criminal landscape,' he said on Tuesday. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Carrique said 'geopolitical instability and social unrest' around the world are driving what he called 'a new wave of public safety threats' as Canadian police confront transnational organized crime, extremism, drug trafficking and exploitation through the internet. 'Whether it's human smuggling as well as illicit exportation and importation of drugs, precursors, and firearms, organized crime groups are taking advantage of systematic blind spots, outdated statues, and digital platforms to victimize Canadians,' he said. While geopolitics and social unrest might be beyond the control of Canadians and their government, their level of preparation and response is not, he said. The current Strong Borders Act legislation proposed by the federal governments gives police many — but not all necessary _ tools to confront globalized crime, he said. The government said the bill would help authorities combat transnational organized crime, stop the flow of fentanyl, crack down on money laundering and bolster police response to criminal networks. Carrique, who's the commissioner of Ontario Provincial Police, made the comments during a news conference in Victoria, where the association is holding its annual conference. He said the federal government's legislation aligns closely with several resolutions the group has passed during the conference this week. Carrique said there are a 'number of loopholes' that must be closed to reflect the realities of 21st century crime, such as the inability of police to get a search warrant for any Canada Post package under 500 grams. 'So, a judge cannot even issue a search warrant for a package of that size that may contain enough fentanyl to kill a number of people.' Carrique also repeated calls for bail reform. 'The federal government has promised a crime bill this fall, introducing tougher bail sentencing provisions,' he said. 'This will be critical.' Victoria Police Chief Del Manak agreed on the need for tougher release conditions. Manak said police made 16 arrests during a two-day-long project to disrupt disorder in the city's downtown core. 'But what was telling was the number of rearrests that we made,' he said. An individual arrested in one block was re-arrested the next day not far from his first arrest following his release on conditions, Manak added. 'What we're really asking for here is the criminal justice system to be strengthened,' Manak said. 'There must be consequences, and a deterrence for those that are carrying out criminal activity every single day,' Manak said. Carrique acknowledged 2024 statistics that show crime rates trending down. The Crime Severity Index, for example, dropped by 4.1 per cent in 2024. 'We attribute that to some amazing work being done by police officers across the country, as well as other social services,' Carrique said. 'But we need to balance that against … the perception of crime, and it doesn't do us any good as police leaders in building trust, and confidence, or legitimacy, when we simply cite statistics to say, 'property crimes are down five per cent, or the homicide rate dropped 10 per cent,' because there are still people being victimized,' he said. Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here .

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