Kxkw Trudeau leaves door open to digital tracing
The Crown office has dropped charges of obstructing police and resisting arrest against freelance video and photo journalist David Ritchie.The charges were withdrawn Tuesday in court, but the Canadian Journalists for Free Expression CJFE says it still wants an investigation into how police treated him.Ritchie was working at the scene of a fatal crash in Waterdown on May 16 when Hamilton police Const. Jeff Todoruck took his camera and put it in his vehicle. He then directed Ritchie to leave. Ritchie refused, requesting the return of his video camera first ?and was promptly arrested. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW The crash killed a 10-year-old girl and the scene was described as e [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley vaso[/url] motional and chaotic, with only two officers initially scrambling to deal with people all over [url=https://www.stanley-cups.fr]gourde stanley[/url] the road.Hamilton police issued a statement Tuesday saying by refusing to abide by police direction in the circumstances, Ritchie caused a breach of the peace. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW In court earlier in the day, assistant Crown att [url=https://www.stanley-cups.com.es]vaso stanley[/url] orney Warren Milko withdrew the charges and Ritchie accepted responsibility for the offence of obstructing a peace officer, according to the police statement issued later.Ritchie said afterward that he was relieved. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW I ;m just happy the charges were withdrawn ?that ; Urww Evidence on preliminary inquiries elusive
MONTREAL ?Quebec food-processing company Olymel says it doesn ;t plan to close either of its two plants in the province dealing with COVID-19 outbreaks.A hog-slaughter facility in Princeville, Que., northeast of Montreal, reported 14 infections among workers on Thursday, and a plant in Quebec Beauce region, southeast of Quebec City, recently reported 126 cases.Company spokesman Richard Vigneault said regional public health authorities haven ;t recommended either plant be closed. Of course we assess all our options when we have a crisis like this, Vigneault said Friday. ARTICLE CONTINUE [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley vaso[/url] S BELOW He said the company has begun [url=https://www.stanleycups.ro]stanley cup[/url] testing 120 employees of the Princeville plant, targeting day shift workers in the cutting room. That facility employs 370 people and is located about 175 kilometres northeast of Montreal.At the Valle-Jonction, Que., facility in th [url=https://www.stanleycup.cz]stanley termohrnek[/url] e Beauce region, mass testing of employees has ended and the company hired a nurse to work on site and assess employees ; symptoms. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW But Martin Maurice, the head of the union representing workers at the Beauce plant, said some employees remain worried. What we want is for the workers to work safely and we don ;t think that the case right now, Maurice said of the plant, where the recent death of a 65-year-old colleague is suspected of being COVID-related.