Author: Lauren Sproule

  • Teen charged with hate graffiti had knife and BB gun in possession

    Teen charged with hate graffiti had knife and BB gun in possession

    The 17-year-old arrested in racist and anti-Semitic graffiti attacks last Saturday was allegedly carrying a knife and BB handgun when he was apprehended by the Ottawa Police.

    According to police reports entered into the court record, the teen was caught in the early hours of the morning on Saturday, Nov. 19, while vandalizing the Soloway Jewish Community Centre on Nadolny Sachs Private.

    He appeared in court late this morning via video feed from a holding cell in the basement of the Ontario Court of Justice.

    Prior to addressing the accused, the Justice of the Peace asked those in attendance whether the parents or guardians of the boy were present. A man and woman seated in the court raised their hands.

    The accused stood before the camera, his wrists in handcuffs, wearing all black and sporting a shaved head. The Justice asked the teen to state his name for the record and announced the adjournment of his hearing.

    The case is set to resume next Wednesday, Nov. 30, when the youth will appear in court yet again via video feed in the early afternoon.

    In the meantime, the accused, whose name is protected under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, will be held in custody.

    The young man was arrested and charged with six counts each of uttering threats and mischief to property following six incidents of racist and anti-Semitic graffiti being spray-painted on various places of worship throughout Ottawa. Police allege he is responsible for all of the attacks.

    The graffiti, including swastikas and derogatory language, was found spray-painted in red on the doors of a prayer centre, mosque, church, a Jewish community centre, and two synagogues.

    The young man also faces two counts of possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose, and six counts of failure to comply with a sentence or disposition. According to court records, the youth was on 18 months’ probation for previous charges of assault, robbery, and bail violations committed last August.

  • Teen charged in hate graffiti attacks to appear in court this morning

    Teen charged in hate graffiti attacks to appear in court this morning

    A 17-year-old boy who was arrested Saturday following a string of racist and anti-Semitic graffiti, is set to appear before an Ottawa court this morning.

    The youth faces 20 charges, including six counts each of uttering threats and mischief to property, and two counts of possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose.

    Court records show that the teen was in violation of his probation at the time of his arrest this past weekend.

    Between Monday and Saturday of last week there were six incidents of hate graffiti throughout the city of Ottawa. Six buildings, including a mosque, church, and synagogue were vandalized. The incidents all included spray-painted swastikas with racist and anti-Semitic language.

     

  • Rookie of the Year

    Rookie of the Year

    It’s obvious why everyone wants to be Bardish Chagger’s friend. The novice MP—already the Minister for Small Business and Tourism and now also the government House leader—looks naturally at ease among her constituents in the Kitchener Market on a recent Saturday, offering broad grins and friendly waves to all those passing through, sipping her Tim Hortons coffee through a straw.

    Not so long ago, a politician like Chagger—young, female and a visible minority—might have been relegated to the backbench. But instead, she’s been handed real decision-making power, and there are some changes she wants to make.

    “We need to be able to shake them up a little bit,” Chagger said, in an interview, adding that the best way is “to bring in somebody that’s not been in the halls of Parliament for too long, somebody who does question and challenge decisions that are being made.”

    First elected in October 2015 as the Member of Parliament for Waterloo—22 years after she first planted a Liberal sign on a front lawn for the then MP, Andrew Telegdi, whom she later served as executive assistant—Chagger is also the first woman to be appointed Leader of the House.

    The position calls for a steady hand and a thorough knowledge of parliamentary procedure, the kind of job not usually assigned to a young, first-time MP. At 36, Chagger is one of the youngest members in the cabinet, second only to the 31-year-old Maryam Monsef. Given that she was one of the co-leads for Trudeau’s Southwestern Ontario campaign, few observers were surprised when Chagger was named Minister for Small Business and Tourism. But her appointment as House leader, this August, certainly made waves, Jim Bronskill wrote in the Huffington Post at the time.

    “By having a government that looks like Canada, I believe, we’re more relevant because people can relate to us as well,” Chagger said.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hasn’t just paid lip service to diversity, appointing more women, visible minorities and people with disabilities to his cabinet than any previous PM. There are now 18 rookies and 15 women in a cabinet of 30. Jodi Wilson-Raybould of the Kwakwaka’wakw peoples, a former Crown prosecutor from British Columbia, has become the first indigenous Minister of Justice. Trudeau gambled by appointing so many novice MPs to cabinet, but it may pay off, especially with Chagger.

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    “She was always very interested in policy,” Telegedi said over the phone, “and always well-liked.”

    Telegi said Chagger has the diplomatic skills necessary to navigate the role.

    Eric Davis, a lawyer who knew Chagger when they were both Young Liberals at the University of Waterloo, says Chagger has “always been community-minded and an exceptionally hard-worker.”

    Chagger recognizes the value of maintaining an open line of communication with the opposition, and plans to focus on teamwork rather than control in her role as House leader.

    “It’s not about one individual, it’s about the team that one comes with, one builds, one empowers,” said Chagger.

    She understands that the government can’t be “everything to everyone,” but Chagger and her fellow ministers are willing to try.