Canadian flyweight Jade Masson-Wong loses split decision in bare-knuckle title fight | Canada News Media
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Canadian flyweight Jade Masson-Wong loses split decision in bare-knuckle title fight

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SALT LAKE CITY – Christine (The Misfit) Ferea won a split decision over Canadian challenger Jade Masson-Wong to defend her Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship flyweight title Friday.

It was a close bout with plenty of clinches. The judges scored it 49-46, 46-49, 49-46 for Ferea, who was making her fourth BKFC title defence.

“Very unsatisfied with that performance, I’m sorry guys. The clinch, she kept on holding on to me,” said the 41-year-old Ferea, who fights out of Las Vegas. “I wanted to box more.”

“Next performance will be better,” she added.

Masson-Wong, the No. 1 contender in the flyweight division, looked disgusted when the verdict did not go her way.

Former UFC and PFL fighter veteran Jeremy (Lil Heathen) Stephens improved to 2-0-0 in bare-knuckle action with a unanimous (49-43) decision over fifth-ranked lightweight Bobby Taylor (6-2-0) in the co-main event at the Maverik Center. The 38-year-old Stephens knocked the 46-year-old Taylor down in the third, fourth and fifth rounds.

Bare-knuckle fighting is conducted — in some jurisdictions — under the same body that regulates boxing and mixed martial arts.

Bouts are contested in a ring with five two-minute rounds. Fighters are permitted to wrap and tape the wrist, thumb and mid-hand, but no gauze or tape can be within 2.5 centimetres of the knuckles. Punches are the only strike allowed.

Without the benefit of gloves, cuts are common. And they can lead to doctor-mandated stoppages, which prevent the losing fighter from taking more damage.

UFC star Conor McGregor is a part-owner of the BKFC promotion.

The 31-year-old Masson-Wong, who came out to Slayer’s “Raining Blood,” looked to score with the jab in a cagey, close first round. The two got busier in the second round with Masson-Wong’s face beginning to show damage around her left eye.

Ferea connected with some punches late in the third, another close round. The champion scored with her right hand in the fourth with Masson-Wong failing to do much damage when she closed the gap.

Masson-Wong used the clinch to blunt Ferea’s attacks in the fifth round.

Masson-Wong says it normally takes her at least two months to get back to hitting pads after a bare-knuckle bout because of the pounding her hands take.

She needed two stitches after her first bare-knuckle bout and six more from the second. She says most fighters average two stitches an outing.

Both fighters weighed in at 124.6 pounds Thursday, just under the 125-pound limit. Masson-Wong took the weigh-in stage holding a giant pair of scissors, saying “I’m going to cut her head off.”

“You’re going to sleep,” responded Ferea, who arrived with an American flag draped over her shoulders.

The two got physical when they faced off, with Ferea shoving Masson-Wong backwards after the fighters each brushed each other’s face with their fist.

Masson-Wong (3-2-0) had won her two previous bouts after losing to Christine (La Abusadora) Vicens in February 2022.

Ferea (9-1-0) defeated fellow American Britain Hart in February 2022 to become the promotion’s inaugural women’s flyweight champion and previously defended the title by dispatching American Taylor (Killa Bee) Starling and current BKFC strawweight champion (Rowdy) Bec Rawlings of Australia (twice).

Ferea has won seven straight — the longest winning streak by a female fighter in BKFC history — since losing to Helen Peralta at BKFC 7 in August 2019.

Masson-Wong divides her time between her native Quebec City and Montreal, where she trains at the Club de Boxe Pound 4 Pound.

A gymnast as a youth, Masson-Wong started boxing at 13 and mixed martial arts at 18. She went 3-2-0 in the TKO and Battlefield Fight League promotions, losing to future UFC fighter Jamey-Lyn Horth in her last outing in February 2020 before the pandemic hit.

Told BKFC was looking for female fighters, she said “Why not?”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 6, 2024.

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Federal money and sales taxes help pump up New Brunswick budget surplus

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FREDERICTON – New Brunswick’s finance minister says the province recorded a surplus of $500.8 million for the fiscal year that ended in March.

Ernie Steeves says the amount — more than 10 times higher than the province’s original $40.3-million budget projection for the 2023-24 fiscal year — was largely the result of a strong economy and population growth.

The report of a big surplus comes as the province prepares for an election campaign, which will officially start on Thursday and end with a vote on Oct. 21.

Steeves says growth of the surplus was fed by revenue from the Harmonized Sales Tax and federal money, especially for health-care funding.

Progressive Conservative Premier Blaine Higgs has promised to reduce the HST by two percentage points to 13 per cent if the party is elected to govern next month.

Meanwhile, the province’s net debt, according to the audited consolidated financial statements, has dropped from $12.3 billion in 2022-23 to $11.8 billion in the most recent fiscal year.

Liberal critic René Legacy says having a stronger balance sheet does not eliminate issues in health care, housing and education.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 16, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Rent cap loophole? Halifax-area landlords defend use of fixed-term leases

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HALIFAX – Some Halifax-area landlords say fixed-term leases allow property owners to recoup operating costs they otherwise can’t under Nova Scotia’s rent cap.

Their comments to a legislative committee today are in reaction to plans by the government to extend the five per cent cap on rental increases to the end of 2027.

But opposition parties and housing activists say the bill’s failure to address fixed-term leases has created a loophole that allows large corporate landlords to boost rents past five per cent for new tenants.

But smaller landlords told a committee today that they too benefit from fixed-term leases, which they said help them from losing money on their investment.

Jenna Ross, of Halifax-based Happy Place Property Management, says her company started implementing those types of leases “because of the rent cap.”

Landlord Yarviv Gadish called the use of fixed-term leases “absolutely essential” in order to keep his apartments presentable and to get a return on his investment.

Unlike a periodic lease, a fixed-term lease does not automatically renew beyond its set end date. The provincial rent cap covers periodic leases and situations in which a landlord signs a new fixed-term lease with the same tenant.

However, there is no rule preventing a landlord from raising the rent as much as they want after the term of a fixed lease expires — as long as they lease to someone new.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 16, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Former military leader Haydn Edmundson found not guilty of sexual assault

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OTTAWA – Former vice-admiral Haydn Edmundson has been found not guilty of sexual assault and committing an indecent act, concluding a trial that began in February.

Edmundson was head of the military’s personnel in 2021 when he was accused of assaulting another member of the navy during a 1991 deployment.

The complainant, Stephanie Viau, testified during the trial that she was 19 years old and in the navy’s lowest rank at the time of the alleged assault, while Edmundson was an older officer.

Edmundson pleaded not guilty and testified that he never had sexual contact with Viau.

In court on Monday, a small group of his supporters gasped when the verdict was read, and Edmundson shook his lawyer’s hand.

Outside court, lawyer Brian Greenspan said his client was gratified by the “clear, decisive vindication of his steadfast position that he was not guilty of these false accusations.”

Justice Matthew Webber read his entire decision to the court Monday, concluding that the Crown did not meet the standard of proving its case beyond a reasonable doubt.

He cited concerns with the complainant’s memory of what happened more than 30 years ago, and a lack of evidence to corroborate her account.

“There are just too many problems, and I’m not in the business of … declaring what happened. That’s not my job, you know, my job is to just decide whether or not guilt has been proven to the requisite standard, and it hasn’t,” Webber said.

During the trial, Viau testified that one of her responsibilities on board the ship was to wake officers for night watch and other overnight duties, and that she woke Edmundson regularly during that 1991 deployment.

The court has heard conflicting evidence about the wake-up calls.

Viau estimated that she woke Edmundson every second or third night, and she told the court that his behaviour became progressively worse during the deployment.

She testified that he started sleeping naked and that one night she found him completely exposed on top of the sheets.

Viau said she “went berserk,” yelling at him and turning on the lights to wake the other officer sleeping in the top bunk.

That incident was the basis for the indecent act charge.

Webber said he did not believe that Viau could have caused such a disruption on board a navy ship at night without notice from others.

“I conclude that (Viau’s) overall evidence on the allegation that Mr. Edmundson did progressively expose himself to her as being far too compromised to approach proof of those allegations that she has made,” he said in his decision.

Viau alleged that the sexual assault happened a couple of days after her yelling at Edmundson.

She testified at trial that he stopped her in the corridor and called her into his sleeping quarters to talk. Viau said Edmundson kept her from leaving the room, and he sexually assaulted her.

When Edmundson took the stand in his own defence he denied having physical or sexual contact with Viau.

During his testimony, Edmundson also said Viau did not wake him regularly during that deployment because his role as the ship’s navigator kept him on mostly day shifts.

Defence lawyer Brian Greenspan took aim at the Crown’s corroborating witness during cross-examination. The woman, whose name is protected by a court-ordered publication ban, was a friend of Viau’s on the ship.

She testified that she remembered the evening of the assault because she and Viau had been getting ready for a night out during a port visit, and she misplaced her reading glasses. She said Viau offered to go fetch them from another part of the ship but never came back, and that she went looking for her friend.

On cross-examination, the woman explained that she had told all of this to a CBC reporter in early 2021.

Greenspan produced a transcript of that interview that he said suggests the reporter told her key details of Viau’s story before asking her any questions.

Greenspan argued the reporter provided information to the witness and she wouldn’t have been able to corroborate the story otherwise.

In his decision, Webber said the woman’s evidence “cannot be relied upon in any respect to corroborate that evidence of the complainant, because it’s it’s clearly a tainted recollection, doesn’t represent a real memory.”

Edmundson was one of several senior military leaders accused of sexual misconduct in early 2021.

He stepped down from his position as head of military personnel after the accusation against him was made public in 2021. The charges were laid months later, in December 2021.

Edmundson testified that in February 2022, he was directed by the chief of the defence staff to retire from the Armed Forces.

The crisis led to an external review by former Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour in May 2022, whose report called for sweeping changes to reform the toxic culture of the Armed Forces.

The military’s new defence chief, Gen. Jennie Carignan, was promoted to the newly created role of chief of professional conduct and culture in an effort to enact the reforms in the Arbour report.

Outside court, Edmundson declined to comment on whether he was considering legal action against the government or the military.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 16, 2024.



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