Black man acquitted of stabbing white man by Portland jury — after victim said the N-word following the attack

A Portland, Oregon, jury has cleared a black man of assault charges for stabbing a white man — after it was revealed that the victim said the N-word after the attack.

Gary Edwards, 43, was found not guilty of second-degree assault after knifing Gregory Howard Jr., 43, on July 7, KPTV reported.

Share

Two-tier public safety protects illegal immigrants and terrorises law-abiding Britons

THE Home Secretary has posted no reaction to the unprovoked knife killing of Wayne Broadhurst in Uxbridge for which an illegal immigrant from Afghanistan has been arrested. Days earlier, Shabana Mahmood had pledged another £10million towards private security for Islamic institutions.

Nobody in government is posting calls to take a knee for Wayne Broadhurst, or to ‘say his name’.

Share

Lawyer decries ‘double standard’ on Freedom Convoy, anti-Israel protests

On October 7, Ontario Court Justice Heather Perkins-McVey handed down conditional sentences to Tamara Lich and Chris Barber for their roles in the 2022 Freedom Convoy. Both Lich and Barber were found guilty of mischief, a criminal charge. While neither faces further jail time, their conditional sentences impose a year of house arrest, followed by six months under a curfew.


A Truck protest today would be one giant Sikh traffic smash-up.

Share

Samuel Williams vs Lucy Connolly

For Samuel Williams, the Oxford PPE student who led a chant at the pro-Palestine march in London last weekend, to be successfully prosecuted the Police and the CPS will have to equate Zionists with Jews. I’m a Zionist, but I’m not a Jew. Someone like Zack Polanski is a Jew but, seemingly not a Zionist.

Allowing the pro-Palestinian marches week after week to chant anti-Zionist slogans is only justifiable if Zionists and Jews aren’t synonymous. If they were the same, then the chants would be illegal.

Share

Carney announces details of new bail reform bill coming next week

Next week, the Canadian government will bring forward a new bail reform bill aimed at cracking down on violent and repeat offenders, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced Thursday.

The new legislation will target those accused of serious crimes such as violent auto thefts, breaking and entering, human trafficking, as well as sexual and violent assaults, in an effort to keep those accused of such acts, out of Canadian communities.

“Right now, in most bail hearings, the starting point is to release, and the Crown must prove why someone should not be released on bail, making it too easy for repeated violent offenders to quickly get back on the street, sometimes back into the same communities that they just committed crimes in,” Carney said. “Our new law will flip that script.”

Share

Cocaine trafficking sentence cut in half for Jamaican facing deportation from Canada

An Ontario judge cut the sentence in half for a Black cocaine trafficker from Jamaica facing “a significant likelihood of deportation” because he’s already serving a six-year prison sentence in Canada for trafficking in fentanyl and gun-related offences.

Police caught Roosevelt Rush, a 32-year-old who was living in Brampton, with 55 grams of cocaine after he was released from custody on bail in December 2022 before sentencing took place for his fentanyl trafficking and gun convictions. The Ontario Court of Justice heard Rush was wearing a GPS monitoring device when authorities tracked him to Belleville, where he was caught with the cocaine.

Share

How often Canadian criminals get special treatment because of race or identity

Last week, a convicted killer in Manitoba was given a jail sentence of just seven years on the grounds that, as an Indigenous man, he wasn’t as guilty as a non-Indigenous offender might have been.

“The offender’s history of victimization, trauma, and cultural disenfranchisement is intricately linked to our country’s shameful legacy of colonialism and attempts at cultural genocide,” wrote provincial court Judge Geoffrey H. Bayly.

Share

Manitoba man gets lighter manslaughter sentence due to Indigenous status

A Manitoba man who stabbed an acquaintance to death in “an unprovoked attack” over a missing cellphone has seen his prison sentence reduced by a year due to his Indigenous status and because he took his victim to hospital, where the man later died from internal bleeding.

Dean Richard Bell pleaded guilty to manslaughter for “fatally” stabbing Calvin Chartrand on Jan. 13, 2024, while they were walking past each other on Main Street in Swan River, Man.

Every 2nd post seems to deal with Woke ethnic crap today. That’s how fecked Canada is.

Share

KLEIN: Is Canada dividing itself with race-based sentencing?

A Calgary man sexually assaulted a 12-year-old girl, terrorized her with threats, and left scars that will last a lifetime. The Crown sought 10 years behind bars. The judge agreed the sentence was fitting. But then came the caveat: “But for his Gladue factors, I would have imposed the sentence sought by the Crown.” And just like that, two years were knocked off.

Share

The insane two-tier bias of Britain’s speech police

In response to the killing of conservative commentator Charlie Kirk earlier this month, British social-media influencer Charlotte Hayes posted a video on TikTok appearing to celebrate his death.

Share

What We Know About ‘Careless’ Discharging of Firearms in Muskoka Area

Videos of men in the Ontario countryside haphazardly discharging firearms, some of which are now prohibited, have gone viral online, and police said they’re investigating.
“Many of you have seen the videos circulating on social media showing individuals discharging firearms in a careless and unsafe manner. We have as well, and have been investigating for some time,” Sgt. Joe Brisebois of the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) said in a video released on Aug. 30.
Share

WARMINGTON: Shooting guns recklessly in Muskoka is a bridge too far for Ontario community

Ford will huff and he’ll puff but in the end he’ll pander

Shocked Premier Doug Ford is “confident” the OPP will quickly round up these mystery suspects

At first glance, it looked like five gunmen standing in line shooting their guns off as part of a firing squad.

Or perhaps it was a special militia holding a bridge in a foreign war zone.

h/t Mauser

Share

The rapist, paedophiles and terror offender spared prison while Lucy Connolly was jailed

Among the criminals handed shorter sentences than Lucy Connolly are a rapist, terror offender, domestic abuser and paedophiles.

Mrs Connolly, 42, a former childminder, was released on Thursday after serving more than 300 days behind bars.

She was jailed for 31 months after pleading guilty to one count of inciting racial hatred contrary to section 19(1) of the Public Order Act 1986 over a hastily deleted post on X shared in the aftermath of the Southport killings.

Share

In the UK, Two-Tier Justice Is Now Undeniable

If there was ever any doubt about the existence of a two-tier justice system in the UK, the case of Ricky Jones just eliminated it.

Last Friday, a jury at Snaresbrook Crown Court in London cleared Jones, a now suspended Labour councillor, of encouraging violent disorder at a protest last August. Jones attended a counter-demonstration in Walthamstow, London, in response to a planned right-wing protest—one of many last summer, sparked by the Southport murders. Surrounded by his fellow protestors, Jones made an impassioned speech, captured on video, denouncing the far Right: “They are disgusting Nazi fascists. We need to cut all their throats and get rid of them all.” At this point, Jones drew his finger across his own throat.

Stirrings …

Share

KLEIN: One law for all: End soft sentences for immigrants

When Parliament returns this fall, one bill should be at the top of the priority list: Ending the practice of giving lighter sentences to criminals who aren’t Canadian citizens. Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner has made it clear her party will bring forward legislation to close this loophole, and every Canadian who believes in fairness should be demanding that it pass.

Share