WARMINGTON: Toronto cop shot and killed in Mississauga

Not the white supremacist you were looking for.

A Toronto Police officer running a training course was shot and killed in Mississauga on Monday afternoon in what Peel Police Chief Nish Duraiappah described as an “unprovoked” attack, which preceded a dramatic string of violence that left three dead and three injured, including the suspect, across various parts of the GTA.

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Suspect dead after shootings in Mississauga, Milton leave 2 dead including Toronto police officer

A suspect has been killed after separate shootings in Mississauga and Milton left a total of two people dead and three injured on Monday.

Two separate shootings were reported in Peel and Halton regions, before a multi-jurisdiction police operation resulted in the death of the suspect in Hamilton.

The first incident was reported in Mississauga, where police said one person was killed and another taken to a local trauma centre. Multiple sources told Global News the victim of the fatal shooting in Mississauga was a Toronto police officer.

Unprovoked ambush attack.

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‘We Always Have Disney Employees’: Florida Sheriff Reveals Results Of Human Trafficking Investigation

A Florida sheriff said that his department “always” caught Disney employees during undercover operations, while revealing the results of a week-long investigation into human trafficking.

The large investigation, known as “Fall Haul 2,” was spearheaded by the Polk County Police Department and involved a week-long sting operation in central Florida that netted over 150 arrests.

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Latest twists in Murdaugh murder mystery: ‘More like ‘Ozark’ every day’

WALTERBORO, SC — Two men who are “cousins” to some of the Walterboro Cowboys, a violent Bloods-affiliated street gang that originated in the so-called “Eastside” of this small city right off I-95, are the latest characters dragged into the notorious Murdaugh murder mystery — and one said he is being “railroaded.”

Meanwhile, one member of the gang told The Post that “Alex Murdaugh runs half the drugs in this county.”

Weird stuff.

 

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Chicago: Moments after 2 armed robberies in Wicker Park, CPD boss orders cops to stop following men wanted for over a dozen hold-ups

An armed robbery crew that has struck repeatedly in Wicker Park and Avondale returned to the area to commit two more daylight robberies on Friday morning. Chicago police spotted the offenders as they fled from the second robbery scene, but a CPD supervisor ordered units not to follow the car onto the expressway. So, the armed men, wanted for more than a dozen armed and sometimes violent robberies, remain at large to commit more crimes.

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FBI Hiding Potentially Explosive Records On Jeffrey Epstein, Internet Sleuth Claims After FOIA Denial

A well-followed internet sleuth believes he has uncovered evidence that the FBI could be sitting on potentially explosive secret records involving dead sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

The anonymous Techno Fog, an self-described lawyer and writer who has nearly 400,000 followers on Twitter and also writes a popular Substack column, says a recent response to a Freedom of Information Act request indicates the beleaguered bureau may be hiding something. Techno Fog sought all records relating to any interviews the FBI had done with Epstein.

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Colby Cosh: Myles Sanderson’s brutal crimes spotlight a disgraceful justice system

On Thursday morning, while catching up on the news about last weekend’s massacre on (and around) James Smith Cree Nation in northern Saskatchewan, I ran across a truly remarkable Globe and Mail headline: “Saskatchewan suspect’s case draws new scrutiny to statutory release.” I hardly knew whether to laugh or cry at this exercise in the journalistic privilege of agenda-setting. The crimes of Myles Sanderson, who died mysteriously in police custody Wednesday after stabbing 18 people and killing ten of them, ought to “draw new scrutiny” to about a hundred different things about the Canadian state and its philosophy of criminal justice. One hardly knows where to start with the list-making.

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Canada’s revolving-door justice system has cost innocent people their lives

Reasonable people will ask how a man with 59 criminal convictions as an adult was ever allowed to roam free in Canada. Surely after three strikes (and an additional 56), along with a history of violence, domestic assault and robbery, an individual would lose his or her ability to live among the public – at least until authorities could be reasonably sure public safety was not at risk.

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The Strange Case of Ghislaine Maxwell

Those that love this country, must also love the moral fiber upon which it was founded.

From that truth, it must also be true that as a society, it is a duty of all Americans to remain vigilant to remove any strand of evil that has invaded our culture’s moral fabric — such as the corruption of our government institutions — before it is allowed to weaken and ultimately destroy the nation our founders designed.

Although examples of such corruption now presently abound, few put on full display what’s at stake better than our government’s recent handling of the Ghislaine Maxwell matter.

That must be one hell of a list.

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Canada rampage suspect death prompts fresh investigation

ROSTHERN, Saskatchewan (AP) — The last suspect in a horrific stabbing rampage that killed 10 and wounded 18 in western Canada is dead following his capture, but how he died after being taken into custody has prompted fresh investigations.

One official said Myles Sanderson, 32, died from self-inflicted injuries Wednesday after police forced the stolen car he was driving off a highway in Saskatchewan. Other officials declined to discuss how he died .

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Stabbing suspect Myles Sanderson was located and taken into police custody near Rosthern, Sask.

Mounties arrest second suspect in Canada stabbing spree that left 10 dead and 18 injured after massive four-day manhunt

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What we know about the victims of the Sask. stabbing spree

A first responder, a veteran and a 77-year-old widower are among the victims identified in a stabbing rampage in Saskatchewan that claimed the lives of 10 people and injured 18 others.

A multi-day search for the suspects, 31-year-old Damien Sanderson and his younger brother Myles Sanderson, 30, began on Sunday following multiple reports of stabbings on the James Smith Cree Nation – about 200 kilometres northeast of Saskatoon – and nearby village of Weldon.

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