Canada A Cricket Criminal: Cricket Canada suspended over allegations of India gang-linked corruption

Canada A Cricket Criminal:  Cricket Canada suspended over allegations of India gang-linked corruption

Cricket’s international governing body has suspended Canada over what it described as “serious breaches of its membership obligations”, dealing the latest blow to an organization that critics say has become a “laughing stock” within the sport.

The suspension also comes amid growing concerns that one of Canada’s fastest-growing sports is being influenced by members of a notorious gang that operates with impunity from an Indian prison cell.

The International Cricket Council (ICC) finalized the suspension at a meeting in Ahmedabad, India, on Sunday amid mounting concerns about the governance of Canada’s national cricket body. The decision follows the freezing of Cricket Canada’s funding in May after allegations that the organization lacked adequate governance systems and had failed to file audited financial statements.

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‘Manitoba’ semi driver kills woman in high-speed fatal crash

‘Manitoba’ semi driver kills woman in high-speed fatal crash

TORONTO — A 35-year-old semi-truck driver has been charged with dangerous driving causing death following a fatal collision in Brandon, Manitoba, that left a 49-year-old woman dead.

According to Brandon Police Service, officers and Brandon Fire & Emergency Services were called to a serious motor vehicle collision at the intersection of Hwy. 110 and Richmond Ave. East at approximately 3:20 p.m. on Wednesday.


Yup. It’s one of those again.

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Third usual suspect charged in Oro-Medonte arson investigation

Provincial police say a third person has now been charged in connection to an arson investigation in an Oro-Medonte subdivision this past winter.

On May 13, police say officers from Orillia’s major crime unit arrested and charged Arsedeep Singh, 26, of Brampton, with arson – damage to property.

Harminder Sandhar, 40, of Kitchener, has been charged with two counts of arson – damage to property.

Dikshant Goyal, 22, of Brampton, has also been charged with two counts of arson – damage to property.

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Bishnoi extortion gang sent letter to Canadian police warning it had 1,000 gunmen

Bishnoi extortion gang sent letter to Canadian police warning it had 1,000 gunmen

The India-based gang behind Canada’s extortion crisis sent a letter to a B.C. police station last year boasting that it had 1,000 foot soldiers willing to carry out shootings, a police officer revealed on Thursday.

Testifying at a deportation hearing, the extortion investigator described the letter from the Lawrence Bishnoi gang that was delivered to a police station in Abbotsford, B.C., on Aug. 13, 2025.

h/t Auntie Polly

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Indian trucker given $2,000 fine for fiery crash that killed two

Indian trucker given $2,000 fine for fiery crash that killed two

For causing a fiery crash just north of Kamloops, B.C., that killed two people, a non-citizen trucker will be required to pay $2,000 and undergo 18 months of probation.

And the B.C. case is just the latest in a string of recent Canadian court decisions where a trucker was handed a controversially lenient sentence for causing a fatal crash, often due to inattention.


Why do we allow foreign murderers to stay in Canada?

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Peel police seek suspects in ‘prolific’ fuel fraud involving commercial trucks

Peel police seek suspects in ‘prolific’ fuel fraud involving commercial trucks

Police have released surveillance camera images showing two suspects who are believed to be responsible for a ‘prolific’ case of gas station fraud in Brampton last year.

Police allege that the suspects used stolen credit card information to obtain fuel for large commercial trucks on 19 separate occasions between May 13 and June 5, 2025.

The fraud occurred at a gas station in the area of Queen Street East and Delta Park Boulevard in Brampton, police say.

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HUNTER: CBSA’s most wanted list nabbed dozens of villains. Then Trudeau killed it

HUNTER: CBSA’s most wanted list nabbed dozens of villains. Then Trudeau killed it

There are 17 of them accused in a widespread campaign of terror and extortion of South Asians in Brampton.

Instead, cops, prosecutors, the Canada Border Services Agency, and others will serve up their usual po-faced approach and start scolding you for suggesting there is a problem of foreign criminals in this country.

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Foreign Gun Squads Rock Toronto Suburbs

Foreign Gun Squads Rock Toronto Suburbs

BRAMPTON — Peel Regional Police have arrested 17 men tied to an international criminal network known as For Brothers, targeting what investigators describe as a coordinated campaign of intimidation, threats, and escalating violence aimed at South Asian business owners across Canada and the United States — in what police called one of the largest extortion cases the region has ever seen, and the latest enforcement strike against a crisis that The Bureau‘s investigations have traced to the wholesale exploitation of Canada’s immigration and international-education systems.

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An Eruption Of Vibrant Diversity …

An Eruption Of Vibrant Diversity …

Armed with hockey sticks and baseball bats, the mob surged forward one by one – baying for blood.

Footage shows their victim, 39-year-old Shamus Hussain, buckling under the weight of the first blow. Out of view of the camera, he was savagely beaten before being stabbed twice in the back, inflicting fatal injuries.

The sickening mob killing unfolded on the evening of July 12 last year at Crow Nest Park in Dewsbury, West Yorkshire – which had been busy with locals enjoying warm summer weather.

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WARMINGTON: Violent extortion bust in Peel leads to 17 non-Canadians charged

WARMINGTON: Violent extortion bust in Peel leads to 17 non-Canadians charged

“Pay up” or they would “shoot up.”

That’s what Peel Regional Police allege criminals extorting innocent business people for cash threatened as part of their “pay up or you pay the price” criminal enterprise in which 324 gunshots were fired into two dozen Peel residences or businesses.

Now it’s the accused’s turn to pay a legal price!

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Brampton homeowners bet big on large houses. Now, forced sales are on the rise

Brampton homeowners bet big on large houses. Now, forced sales are on the rise

In one home for sale, giant photos of the Toronto skyline at dusk paper the walls of what might have been a rental apartment.

Another house is missing a fridge, but there’s furniture piled in the basement, including a mattress and bed frame.

Some other places have two-car garages; many have large secondary suites. All are mostly empty. On the doors, official notices warn against entry.


You can’t hate the Liberal Party enough.

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Toronto man who killed off-duty firefighter at a café now out of hospital despite ‘significant threat’

Toronto man who killed off-duty firefighter at a café now out of hospital despite ‘significant threat’

A Toronto man found not criminally responsible for the unprovoked killing of an off-duty firefighter at a café in 2013 who “continues to represent a significant threat to the safety of the public” has moved out of hospital, only has to check in with his handlers every two weeks, and is now living in a residential facility that’s a quick walk or bus ride from the city’s Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.

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Manitoba’s Record Drug Bust Reveals a Snow Cartel Network Built to Outlast A Former Olympian — and Canada’s Failure to Stop It

Manitoba’s Record Drug Bust Reveals a Snow Cartel Network Built to Outlast A Former Olympian — and Canada’s Failure to Stop It

OTTAWA — Winnipeg police announced Wednesday what they called the largest drug bust in Manitoba history: 33 people arrested, 174 criminal charges, more than 525 kilograms of cocaine, methamphetamine, and fentanyl seized, $825,000 in cash recovered, and a two-year investigation — Project Puma — that required 14 partner agencies spanning four provinces. The numbers are staggering. They are also, by the assessment of the lead investigator himself, incomplete.

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Air Canada employee accused in Canada’s largest gold heist had been on police radar for years

Air Canada employee accused in Canada’s largest gold heist had been on police radar for years

An Air Canada employee accused in Canada’s largest gold heist had been on police radar for years before millions in gold vanished from Toronto Pearson International Airport.

A W5 investigation has uncovered intelligence reports, court records and exclusive data that raise troubling questions about how airport employees with alleged links to organized crime, drug trafficking and violence were able to retain access to restricted areas at Canada’s busiest airport.


Transport Canada is compromised. h/t Mauser

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