adplus-dvertising
Connect with us

News

Coronavirus: What's happening in Canada and around the world on Monday – CBC News

Published

 on


The latest:

South Korea will no longer use GPS monitoring to enforce quarantines and will also end daily checkup calls to low-risk coronavirus patients as a fast-developing Omicron surge overwhelms health and government workers.

The speed of transmissions has made it impossible to maintain a tight and proactive medical response, Jeong Eun-kyeong, the country’s top infectious disease expert, said Monday.

300x250x1

The Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency reported 38,691 new cases of the virus — a nine-fold increase from the levels seen in mid-January, when Omicron became the country’s dominant strain. Jeong said the country may see daily jumps of 130,000 or 170,000 by late February.

South Korea had been seen as a success story during the earlier part of the pandemic after it contained infections and hospitalizations more effectively than most countries in the West. Health authorities worked closely with biotech companies to ramp up laboratory tests and aggressively mobilized technological tools and public workers to trace contacts and enforce quarantines.

But the country’s strengths have been rendered irrelevant by the unprecedented spike in infections fuelled by the Omicron variant, which has stretched health and administrative resources.

Officials had already been forced to expand at-home treatments, reduce quarantine periods and reshape testing policy around rapid antigen test kits, despite concerns over their reliability, to save laboratory tests for people in their 60s or older and those with existing medical conditions who are at higher risk for serious illness.

The plans to further ease the monitoring and quarantines came as health and public workers struggle to keep up with the near 150,000 people being treated at home for mild or moderate symptoms, which have led to delays in drug prescriptions and has paralyzed contact tracing.

Officials say public workers who had been monitoring virus carriers through GPS-enabled smartphone apps will now be assigned to help with at-home treatments. Virus carriers will no longer be required to report to local health offices when they leave home to visit doctors, while their cohabiting family members can now freely go out to buy food, medicine and other essentials.

Low-risk virus carriers, who are in their 50s or younger and have no pre-existing medical conditions, will now be left to monitor their conditions on their own and contact local hospitals if their symptoms worsen. Health workers will still make daily checkup calls to people in their 60s and older or those with pre-existing medical conditions.

“We are planning to transition toward an anti-virus strategy that’s concentrated on maintaining essential social functions while dealing with huge numbers of infections and people placed under quarantine,” Jeong said during a government briefing.

-From The Associated Press, last updated at 7:20 a.m. ET


What’s happening across Canada

WATCH | Ottawa seeks more police amid state of emergency over protest: 

Ottawa seeks more police amid state of emergency

15 hours ago

Duration 4:52

Ottawa police are stepping up pressure on convoy protesters, seizing fuel and making arrests, says Mayor Jim Watson, but the city has also requested more police from the OPP and the RCMP. 4:52

With lab-based testing capacity deeply strained and increasingly restricted, experts say true case counts are likely far higher than reported. Hospitalization data at the regional level is also evolving, with several provinces saying they will report figures that separate the number of people in hospital because of COVID-19 from those in hospital for another medical issue who also test positive for COVID-19.

For more information on what is happening in your community — including details on outbreaks, testing capacity and local restrictions — click through to the regional coverage below.

You can also read more from the Public Health Agency of Canada, which provides a detailed look at every region — including seven-day average test positivity rates — in its daily epidemiological updates.

In Central Canada, venues across Quebec’s cultural sector are set to partially reopen Monday as the province eases health restrictions put in place to contain COVID-19. Places of worship, entertainment and sports venues are allowed to reopen after being shut down since December, with capacity limits in place and proof of vaccination required for entry.

The shift came as the province on Monday reported 2,425 hospitalizations — up by 14 from a day earlier — with 178 people in the province’s intensive care units. A COVID-19 update posted online showed an additional 20 deaths.

Both Quebec and Ontario are engaged in gradual easing of restrictions, but the mayor of Quebec’s largest city wants more detail from the province on how, exactly, that process will unfold. Mayor Valérie Plante said Montreal is a “cultural metropolis” and economic engine — adding that businesses and the cultural sector need more information to plan for spring and summer.

In Ontario, long-term care residents can start taking social trips and see more caregivers as of Monday. The loosened visitor restrictions come after more than a month of strict rules aimed at slowing the Omicron variant.

Starting Monday, the number of designated caregivers per resident increases from two to four, though only two can visit at a time. Residents who have had at least three doses of a COVID-19 vaccine are now allowed to resume social day trips.

The number of people in hospital due to COVID-19 in the hard-hit province fell Monday by 75 to 2,155, according to Ontario’s COVID-19 dashboard. Health officials said 486 people were in the province’s intensive care units. The update came as the province recorded 11 additional deaths.

In Atlantic Canada, Newfoundland and Labrador officials are easing some COVID-19 restrictions as of Monday. The shift allows businesses like gyms and restaurant dining rooms to reopen with capacity restrictions. There are currently 22 people in hospital, including six in intensive care units, with COVID-19. 

In Nova Scotia, there were 91 people in hospital Monday who were admitted due to COVID-19 and were receiving specialized care in a COVID-19 designated unit, including 12 people in ICU. There were also three additional deaths reported. 

In New Brunswick, four more people have died from COVID-19. A total of 151 people with COVID-19 are in hospital, including 16 in ICUs, while in Prince Edward Island, there are 11 people in hospital with one in the ICU. 

In the Prairie provinces, starting this week, Saskatchewan will stop issuing daily reports of COVID-19 cases, which has become known as the COVID dashboard. It will instead shift to reporting the information weekly on Thursdays.

The province announced the decision last week as part of a number of changes it says are occurring as Saskatchewan prepares to manage COVID-19 in the long term. Premier Scott Moe has said the Saskatchewan Party government will remove pandemic restrictions soon, but he hasn’t released a date.

Alberta reported 39 more deaths Monday from over the past three days. There were 1,542 people in hospital with COVID-19, including 118 in the ICU. Premier Jason Kenney is expected to provide more details this week about how COVID-19 restrictions will be phased out in the province.

Manitoba announced plans to expand its booster shot program to some teens, as the province reported another 15 deaths from the virus. There are currently 707 people being treated for COVID-19 in Manitoba hospitals, including 47 in the ICU. 

British Columbia on Monday reported 32 deaths from COVID-19 that occurred over the past three days. The number of people in hospital with the virus rose to 987, with 141 people in the ICU. 

In the North, health officials in Yukon said as of Monday, young people between the age of 12 and 17 can receive a booster dose of COVID-19 vaccine, provided they are six months past their second dose.

“Immunocompromised children aged five to 11 who have already received their primary series will be able to receive a third dose,” a statement from territorial officials said. Four people are being treated for COVID-19 in hospital in the territory. 

-From The Canadian Press and CBC News, last updated at 7:15 p.m. ET


What’s happening around the world

As of Monday evening, nearly 397 million cases of COVID-19 had been reported worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University’s coronavirus tracking tool. The reported global death toll stood at more than 5.7 million.

In the Asia-Pacific region, authorities in China’s southwestern city of Baise ordered residents to stay at home from Monday and avoid unnecessary travel as they enforced curbs that are among the toughest in the nation’s tool box to fight rising local infections of COVID-19.

The effort takes on extra urgency during the staging of the Winter Olympics, which began on Friday and run until Feb. 20, as well as a busy travel season for the Lunar New Year holiday.

Indonesia is also tightening social restrictions in Jakarta and Bali, as well as in two other cities on Java island, in a bid to contain a spike in coronavirus infections, a senior cabinet minister said.

Meanwhile, Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said on Monday he wants to speed up the country’s COVID-19 booster shot program to one million shots a day by the end of the month — about double the current pace.

In the Americas, Democratic leaders in the U.S. Congress planned to hold a moment of silence Monday evening to commemorate the 900,000 American lives lost to the COVID-19 pandemic. The figure marks an increase of more than 100,000 U.S. COVID-19 fatalities since Dec. 12, coinciding with a surge of infections and hospitalizations driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant of the virus.

Honduran President Xiomara Castro has tested positive for COVID-19, she said on Sunday, adding that she has mild symptoms and will be working in isolation.

American figure skater Vincent Zhou said he has withdrawn from the Beijing Olympics ahead of the men’s singles competition this week after testing positive for COVID-19.

In Europe, Ireland will celebrate St. Patrick’s Day next month with a parade through the streets of Dublin for the first time in three years.

In Africa, South Africa is seeing more cases of the BA.2 sub-variant of Omicron and is monitoring it, but there is no clear sign that BA.2 is substantially different from the original Omicron strain, a senior scientist said. Health officials in South Africa on Sunday reported 1,752 new cases of COVID-19 and 18 additional deaths.

WATCH | Experts warn about returning to ‘normal’ too soon: 

Experts warn about returning to ‘normal’ too soon

24 hours ago

Duration 2:04

Various countries have started removing all COVID-19 public health restrictions and some provinces are preparing to do the same, but experts say a rushed return to “normal” could backfire. 2:04

Nigeria has received two million doses of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine from Finland, Greece and Slovenia, with more EU donations set to arrive in the coming weeks, government officials said on Monday. The vaccines are currently in a cold room at the airport of the west African nation’s capital, Abuja.

“This batch of vaccines will expire in August 2023. So we have ample time to administer [the shots],” Faisal Shuaib, executive director of Nigeria’s National Primary Health Care Development Agency, told reporters at an airport news conference.

In the Middle East, hard-hit Iran on Monday registered more than 100 new deaths from COVID-19 over a 24-hour period as the aggressive Omicron variant spreads in the country, state TV reported. The report said 104 patients died from the disease since Sunday, when the Islamic Republic announced 85 new deaths over a day’s time.

Meanwhile, health officials in Saudi Arabia on Sunday reported 3,260 additional cases of COVID-19 over 24 hours and one additional death.

-From Reuters and CBC News, last updated at 5:45 p.m. ET

Adblock test (Why?)

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

News

Freeland's new federal budget hikes taxes on the rich to cover billions in new spending – CBC.ca

Published

 on


HIGHLIGHTS:

  • Ottawa to spend $52.9 billion more than planned over the next five years.
  • Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland projects Ottawa will post a $40 billion deficit this fiscal year.
  • The budget includes $8.5 billion in new spending for housing.
  • Other major budget items include a $6 billion Canada Disability Benefit, a $1 billion national school food program and a $500-million fund for youth mental health.
  • Freeland will hike capital gain taxes paid by the rich and corporations to collect an estimated $19 billion in new revenue.
  • The cost to service the growing national debt has increased substantially — it’s now about $2 billion more than it was projected to be just a few months ago.
  • The government will spend more on servicing its debt than on health care this year.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s fourth budget delivers a big-ticket housing program for millennials and Generation Z voters — a multi-billion dollar commitment to be paid for in part with a tax hike on the rich and corporate Canada.

Freeland’s document calls for about $52.9 billion in new spending over the next five years — a significant jump over what Ottawa had said it would spend in the fall economic statement released just a few months ago.

300x250x1

To offset some of that new spending, Freeland is pitching policy changes the government says will generate roughly $21.9 billion in new revenue. That money is to come in part from higher capital gains taxes and a hike to excise taxes on cigarettes and vaping products.

“We are making Canada’s tax system more fair by ensuring that the very wealthiest pay their fair share,” Freeland said Tuesday after tabling her budget in Parliament.

“We are doing this because a fair chance to build a good, middle class life — to do as well as your parents, and grandparents, or better — has always been the promise of Canada.”

The result is a projected budget deficit of about $40 billion in the 2024-25 fiscal year — roughly what Freeland had predicted.

While the government is spending more overall, it says that better-than-expected economic growth and higher taxes will keep the deficit under control.

The Liberal government’s preferred “fiscal anchor” — the budget benchmark that guides its decisions — has long been to keep the net debt-to-GDP ratio on a declining trend, with debt levels closely tracking the overall size of the economy.

The budget document says the government must meet that benchmark in the years ahead to retain Canada’s triple-A credit rating.

Debt charges soar

Deficits eventually roll over into long-term debt. The cost to finance Canada’s growing debt pile — which has more than doubled over the last nine years to $1.4 trillion — is eating up more and more taxpayer dollars as the government is forced to refinance its borrowing at higher rates.

Public debt charges will cost $2 billion more this year than the forecast in November as the Bank of Canada keeps rates relatively high to tame inflation — which has shown signs of slowing down.

With interest rates at a 20-year high, Ottawa’s cost to borrow has spiked from $20.3 billion in 2020-21 to $54.1 billion in 2024-25.

That means Ottawa will spend more to service its debt than it will on health care this year — and the debt charges will march even higher in the years ahead.

Carrying the debt is expected to cost the federal treasury $64.3 billion in 2028-29 — more than double what Ottawa sends to the provinces through equalization payments.

“The interest rates are hurting the government just as much as they’re hurting us consumers,” said Sahir Khan, a former deputy parliamentary budget officer and the executive vice-president of the uOttawa Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy.

“It’s now a meaningful amount relative to other spending pressures and it’s going to start squeezing other programs. The government built up a stock of debt subject to prevailing interest rates and that creates a risk.”

Billions more for housing

The budget allocates $8.5 billion more to housing to help alleviate a crisis that has locked a generation of young people out of the dream of home ownership. The government maintains its housing measures will drive the creation of roughly four million more homes by 2031.

WATCH: New investment to lead ‘housing revolution in Canada,’ Freeland says 

New investment to lead ‘housing revolution in Canada,’ Freeland says

1 day ago

Duration 1:04

Finance Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said this year’s federal budget will pave the way for Canada to build more homes at a pace not seen since the Second World War. The new investment and changes to funding models will also cut through red tape and break down zoning barriers for people who want to build homes faster, she said

Freeland has freed up money to send more cash to municipalities through the Housing Accelerator Fund, build more homes on underused public lands and at Canada Post outlets, cut cheques for new water and solid waste infrastructure in growing communities, offer tens of billions of dollars in loans to spur new rental construction and secondary suites, and help non-profits acquire existing rental homes and keep them affordable.

“We are moving with purpose to help build more homes, faster. We are making life cost less,” Freeland said. “Millennial and Gen Z Canadians, we want them to look forward to the future with a sense of anticipation, not angst.”

A man with a face mask wears a cardboard house on his head atop a bike helmet.
A man wears a cardboard house on his head during a demonstration calling for more affordable housing and social housing in Montreal. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

The government also has committed to maintaining the already well-subscribed tax-free savings account, extending mortgage amortization terms and increasing the RRSP withdrawal limit for some first-home buyers, among other measures.

The housing program is a “home run,” said Armine Yalnizyan, a progressive economist and the Atkinson Fellow on the Future of Workers.

Yalnizyan said Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s early focus on housing hurt the Liberals’ standing among some millennial voters.

Now, the Liberals are trying to reclaim some of those votes with an ambitious program which, if it’s carried out as planned, will meaningfully increase the country’s housing supply, she said.

“It’s really an attempt to stop the Conservatives from eating their lunch,” she said.

A tax hike on the rich

As Ottawa moves to remake the housing landscape, roll out a national dental care program and launch pharmacare, Freeland’s budget includes a number of targeted tax hikes that it says will yield some $21.9 billion in new revenue over the next five years.

The biggest windfall will come from an increase to the capital gains inclusion rate.

Under the current regime, only 50 per cent of capital gains are taxable. If a taxpayer sells an asset like a cottage, an investment property, a stock or mutual fund for $100,000 more than they paid, they are taxed only on $50,000 of that profit.

With this new budget, the “inclusion rate” will increase from one-half to two-thirds on capital gains above $250,000 per year for individuals, and on all capital gains realized by corporations and trusts.

The move is likely to be seen by business-friendly groups as an attack on the people and businesses that create jobs.

Freeland said she anticipates some blowback.

“I know there will be many voices raised in protest. No one likes paying more tax, even — or perhaps particularly — those who can afford it the most,” she said.

“Tax policy is not only, or chiefly, the province of accountants or economists. It belongs to all of us because it is how we decide what kind of country we want to live in and what kind of country we want to build.”

A man wearing a suit and a tie speaks at a microphone.
New Democratic Party Leader Jagmeet Singh has been pushing for higher taxes on the wealthy. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

The NDP — the government’s partner in the supply-and-confidence agreement — likely will welcome the change; party leader Jagmeet Singh has said the wealthy and big corporations should shoulder more of the country’s tax burden.

“We are asking the wealthiest Canadians to contribute a bit more, so that we can make investments to ensure a fair chance for every generation,” the budget document says. “Canada’s tax system can be more fair.”

The change will not apply to any capital gains from the sale of a primary residence. Investment income earned in an RRSP or TFSA, including capital gains, also will not be taxed.

According to government data, only 0.13 per cent of Canadians — people with an average income of about $1.4 million a year — are expected to pay more in personal income tax on their capital gains as a result of this change.

Jimmy Jean, an economist at Desjardins who tracks Ottawa’s spending, said the federal government’s goal of collecting about $19 billion from the capital gains measure may be difficult to achieve.

“The jury’s out on whether they can get that much,” Jean said.

“Targeting the income and wealth of the wealthy — it’s difficult because it’s more mobile, they can move it around. I’m skeptical.”

Other new revenue-generating measures in the budget include a promise to crack down on bankruptcy fraud and tackle “aggressive tax planning schemes.”

Beyond housing, there’s also a promise to top up the incentives for zero-emission vehicles, deliver a new carbon tax rebate for small businesses, stand up an $800-million energy efficiency retrofit program, increase student grants, create a $500-million fund for youth mental health, launch a $6 billion Canada Disability Benefit, fund a $1 billion national school food program and deliver a $900-million top-up to the Indigenous infrastructure program.

CBC/Radio-Canada will get a one-off $42 million budget boost for news and entertainment programming — a cash injection that will help the company avoid some of the previously announced layoffs.

VIA Rail Canada stands to gain about $400 million over the next few years to turn the dream of high-frequency rail in central Canada into a reality.

WATCH: What’s in the new federal budget? 

What’s in the new federal budget?

23 hours ago

Duration 3:18

CBC News breaks down the biggest items in the new federal budget — and how the government is planning to pay for billions in new spending.

Poilievre blasts budget, Singh stays noncommittal

Poilievre pilloried the budget and said his party would vote against it.

Speaking in the House of Commons, the Conservative leader said the Liberal government has never presented a balanced budget in all the years it’s been in office and the promised $40 billion in new spending will drive inflation higher.

“This is the ninth deficit. The ninth deficit after the prime minister promised the budget would balance itself and what did he do with the money? Everything he spent it on has become more expensive,” Poilievre said.

“This is like a pyromaniac spraying gas on the inflationary fire that he lit. It is getting too hot and too expensive for Canadians and that’s why we need a carbon tax election to replace him with a common sense Conservative government.”

WATCH: Conservative leader rises in House of Commons to reject Liberal budget 

Conservative leader rises in House of Commons to reject Liberal budget

1 day ago

Duration 1:39

Responding to Tuesday’s budget by the federal Liberals, opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre says Conservatives will vote against the financial plan, and renewed his call for ‘a carbon tax election’ to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Singh, meanwhile, said it’s too early to say if his party will support the budget.

While he praised some measures he said his party forced the government to include, such as dental care, pharmacare and a national school food program, Singh said he wants to meet with Trudeau to raise some other “concerns” before making a final decision.

Singh said he’s not onside with a plan to cut about 5,000 public servants through attrition — the federal bureaucracy has grown to about 357,247 workers under Trudeau — and he said there’s inadequate funding for Indigenous peoples.

WATCH: Liberals ‘ignored opportunity’ to tackle corporate greed, NDP says 

Liberals ‘ignored opportunity’ in budget to tackle corporate greed, NDP says

1 day ago

Duration 3:09

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says while he is glad to see some measures in the 2024 budget like protections for renters and the national school food program, he believes the Liberals could have done more to bring grocery, internet and housing prices down.

If Singh and his NDP MPs withhold their votes, the minority government could lose the confidence of the House of Commons, tipping the country into an early election.

While the capital gains tax increase will cost the country’s big businesses billions more than what they pay now, Singh said “the Liberals ignored the opportunity to take on corporate greed.”

Singh said the companies he blames for inflation — grocery store chains, telecommunications companies and “housing and corporate landlords” — should have faced tax hikes.

Green Party Leader Elizabeth May said her caucus will vote against Freeland’s budget.

She said the government’s planned disability benefit, which amounts to about $200 a month for eligible Canadians, is too low.

May also said there’s not enough money earmarked for social housing — just more loans for developers to build more affordable homes.

“The budget falls far short of our hopes,” May said. “It’s not meeting the moment. We need dramatic, transformative changes to our society to be able to afford the things we need.”

Adblock test (Why?)

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

News

Tim Hortons says 'technical errors' falsely told people they won $55K boat in Roll Up To Win promo – CBC.ca

Published

 on


A technical error by Tim Hortons led coffee drinkers across Canada to falsely believe they had won a $55,000 boat as part of the franchise’s Roll Up To Win promotion.

It’s unclear how many people were impacted, but the chain told CBC Hamilton in an email it was an “unfortunate error” and some customers were sent an email with incorrect information.

Darren Stewart-Jones of Hamilton said he opened an email on Wednesday morning from Tim Hortons that recapped all the prizes he won this year and it included one he didn’t recognize: a 2024 Tracker Targa 18 WT boat and trailer, which retails for $39,995 US (about $55,000 Cdn) — the only one available to participants.

300x250x1

“I thought, ‘Wow, this could be really awesome,'” Stewart-Jones told CBC News in a phone interview.

But his initial burst of excitement turned into questions as he scrolled through his emails to find out when he’d won the boat.

He said he’d always received emails after winning past prizes.

A picture of the 2024 Tracker Targa 18 WT boat and trailer.
There was only one boat in the Tim Hortons contest —  a 2024 Tracker Targa 18 WT that retails for $39,995 US (about $55,000 Cdn). (Submitted by Chris Rivet)

Within an hour, he got a call from a friend in Brampton, Ont., who said she also won a boat.

“That’s when I clued in and thought, ‘I think this is a huge mess-up,'” Stewart-Jones said.

Chris Rivet, from Edmonton, had the same experience.

“I went from being a winner to a loser,” Rivet said.

Participants considering lawsuits

Alanna O’Hoski of Hamilton said she received the email and spent part of the day on hold waiting for an answer from Tim Hortons.

“With how tight things are nowadays, it was definitely a gut punch,” she said in a message to CBC News. “A lot of people, myself included… thought they won something of potential life-changing value.”

Tim Hortons sent customers an email with instructions to “disregard” the recap email they received, saying “technical errors” may have allowed for some prizes they didn’t win to end up in the recap email.

“We apologize for the frustration this has caused and for not living up to our high standards of providing an exceptional guest experience,” read the letter, which Tim Hortons shared with CBC.

A man holding a coffee cup.
Darren Stewart-Jones of Hamilton says his excitement quickly disappeared when he realized the email from Tim Hortons that included the boat win was a mistake. (Submitted by Darren Stewart-Jones)

Rivet said he has filed a complaint with the Competition Bureau of Canada and is considering filing a lawsuit.

On Wednesday afternoon, a Facebook group formed with over 200 people expressing outrage about the mistake and threatening to file lawsuits.

“NOPE, Not taking this as an answer!! Two words: CLASS ACTION,” read a post from Christiane Marie.

“I want my boat!” read another post, from Beau Johnson.

Just over a year ago, the Tim Hortons app mistakenly informed users they’d won $10,000.

“This is a repeated pattern of behaviour and simply saying it’s a technical issue just goes to show Tim Hortons didn’t do its due diligence,” Rivet said.

“It doesn’t exclude them from the harm they’ve caused.”

After the last mishap, Hamed Aghakhani, associate professor of marketing at Dalhousie University’s Rowe School of Business, told CBC News the coffee chain’s terms and conditions likely protect the company in case of an issue like this.

But he also said if the issue remains unresolved, it would erode the public’s confidence in the brand over time.

Adblock test (Why?)

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

News

Toronto Pearson airport gold heist arrests include Air Canada staff – National Post

Published

 on


The gold has likely all been melted down, reforged into other forms, and made its way into local or international markets

Get the latest from Adrian Humphreys straight to your inbox

Article content

The Toronto Pearson airport gold heist was such an inside job that the Air Canada manager who gave police investigators a tour of the crime scene at the cargo warehouse from where it was stolen is now wanted for the $24 million theft, along with another Air Canada employee who has been arrested.

Precisely one year after the brazen and baffling theft, Peel Regional Police announced nine arrest warrants as part of the gold heist.

Advertisement 2

Article content

Article content

Five of the accused were arrested in Canada and have already been released from custody on conditions pending trial.

Four more are wanted in Canada, although one, the alleged driver of the truck used to cart off the gold from the airport, is in custody in the United States, where he was arrested after police stopped a car in Pennsylvania with 65 handguns in the trunk that were allegedly being smuggled into Canada.

The vehicle used to transport the stolen gold
The vehicle used to transport the stolen gold from Toronto’s Pearson airport. Photo by Peel Regional Police

Authorities said a portion of the proceeds from the stolen gold was used to fund a cross-border gun running plot, leading the chair of the Peel Police Services Board, Nando Iannicca, to say the case was about “reverse alchemy … how gold becomes guns.”

The gold has likely all been melted down, reforged into other forms, and made its way into local or international markets.

A tiny portion of what police believed is gold from the heist has been recovered. It had been forged into six crudely made gold bracelets, mimicking the look of cheap bangles. With the purity of the gold, they are worth about $90,000. Police seized smelting pots, casts, and metal molds believed to have been used to transform the missing gold.

Advertisement 3

Article content

As well, $430,000 in Canadian currency, believed to be some of the profit from the sale of the gold, was recovered by police. The white five-ton truck allegedly used in the heist has also been seized and provided the backdrop for the police announcement, Wednesday, in Brampton.

Gold bracelets seized as part of the arrests
These six gold bangles are believed to have been made with the stolen gold. Photo by Peel Regional Police

Peel police officials outlined the heist and their investigation, a 17-person team codenamed Project 24K, the measurement for nearly pure gold.

The size of the heist plot is suggested by two versions of a “debt list” found by police during two different raids; police believe they outline those who received or were owed a portion of profits from the job. One was for $9,943,000 and the other for $10,023,000. It suggests the thieves sold the gold at half price.

There appears to be 18 names on both lists. The names are the same between the two, police said.

“We are working hard to identify each of these individuals,” said Detective Sergeant Mike Mavity, major case manager for Project 24K.

Debt lists linked to the Toronto airport gold heist
Police believe these debt lists outline those who received or were owed a portion of profits from the job. Photo by Peel Regional Police

The lists allocate money for supplies, travel and personal items, he said.

Among those allegedly involved are two who were Air Canada employees at the time of the heist, and a jewelry store owner.

Article content

Advertisement 4

Article content

Mavity said it was an inside job: “Because of their position within Air Canada in my opinion, yeh, they needed people inside Air Canada to facilitate this stuff.”

Intimate inside knowledge of Air Canada cargo operations, and access to Air Canada’s equipment to print a duplicate shipping waybill, made the heist seem absurdly easy.

That inside action, however, also tipped police off to possible suspects early in the investigation, police said.

Mavity said they learned that an Air Canada cargo manager, who had earlier given investigators a tour of the crime scene, was resigning. That’s one clue of a possible insider. When investigators went to speak with him, he had disappeared, another strong clue.

“He resigned in the summer of last year. And then we have not been able to locate him since. We have an idea of where he is,” Mavity said.

Although it seemed an easy score, Nishan Duraiappah, Peel police chief, said the job was carefully planned and orchestrated by a large group of criminals.

Peel Regional Police hold press conference on Pearson gold heist
Peel Regional Police Chief Nishan Duraiappah announced details and arrests in Brampton concerning the theft of gold from Pearson International Airport, Wednesday April 17, 2024. Photo by Peter J. Thompson / National Post

Mavity summarized the investigation.

A shipping container filled with 6,600 variously sized bars of almost pure gold, weighing 400.19 kilograms, from a refinery in Zurich, Switzerland, arrived aboard a daily Air Canada flight to Toronto at 3:56 p.m., on April 17, 2023.

Advertisement 5

Article content

The gold was valued at the time at more than $20 million. The shipping container also contained foreign currency worth about $2.5 million. The contents were being delivered by Brink’s on behalf of two clients.

It was taken to Air Canada’s cargo facility.

At 6:32 p.m., a man arrived at the warehouse driving a white, five-ton truck, reversed it into one of the many loading docks and went inside to talk to Air Canada warehouse staff. He had a waybill.

The waybill used in the gold heist
This waybill was used in the gold heist at Toronto’s Pearson airport. Photo by Peel Regional Police

It was a real Air Canada waybill, but for a legitimate shipment of seafood that had been picked up the day before. The duplicate waybill was printed off within the Air Canada cargo facility, Mavity said.

“Once inside the warehouse, the suspect then provided it to an Air Canada cargo warehouse attendant. A short time later a forklift arrived with a container of gold and foreign currency and loaded it into the rear of the suspect’s truck.”

He then drove away.

It wasn’t until 9:30 p.m. that evening that Brink’s security personnel arrived expecting to collect the valuable container. Air Canada employees couldn’t find it, realized it was missing, and began an internal investigation, Mavity said.

Advertisement 6

Article content

At 2:43 a.m., on April 18, 2023, Peel police were called and told of the theft.

Each gold bar had individual serial numbers.

Stacks of Canadian cash seized as part of the arrests
Police seized $430,000 in Canadian currency, believed to be some of the profit from the sale of the gold. Photo by Peel Regional Police

Peel investigators went door-to-door over four weeks seeking video surveillance images to help track the truck, starting from the warehouse. The area around the airport is thick with businesses small and large.

Mavity said his team managed to track the truck leaving through Peel region onto Highway 401, heading west. It exited the highway at Bronte Road and headed north on Bronte, in Oakville.

Once the truck reached Milton, the area becomes more rural with little video coverage.

“We lose sight of the truck,” he said but it was later recovered.

Over the year, Project 24K investigators executed 37 search warrants, 70 production orders, and interviewed more than 50 people.

One of the first on their radar was the alleged driver, Durante King-Mclean, 25, of Brampton.

“Through a forensic identification and other police techniques we identified King-Mclean as the driver early in the investigation,” Mavity said.

For months police quietly searched but couldn’t find him. They didn’t know he was in the United States.

Advertisement 7

Article content

Firearms seized as part of the arrests
A portion of the proceeds from the stolen gold was used to fund a cross-border gun running plot, police said. Photo by Peel Regional Police

As luck would have it, on Sept. 2, 2023, a Pennsylvania state trooper pulled over the driver of a Nissan Sentra that seemed to be driving erratically and had windshields tinted too dark, near the town of Shippensburg, about 150 kilometres northwest of Washington, D.C.

Police say the driver ran away but was arrested shortly after. He appeared to be illegally in the United States. When they checked him on the police database, it flagged him as wanted by Peel police.

When troopers opened the Nissan’s trunk, they didn’t find gold bars, but 65 guns instead, that were destined to be smuggled into Canada, an indictment filed in the U.S. alleges. Two were fully automatic, 11 had been stolen, and one had an obliterated serial number, U.S. officials said.

U.S. investigators say they found messages between King-Mclean and another man from Brampton, Prasath Paramalingam, 35, from about a week or so after the gold heist discussing King-Mclean illegally crossing the border to get guns and bring them back to Canada. They used Threema, an encrypted messaging app, and Instagram.

Paramalingam told King-Mclean he is going to leave Portugal early to get cash for him. The next day he sent King-Mclean a photograph of large amounts of Canadian currency wrapped in stacks with rubber bands, the indictment says.

Advertisement 8

Article content

Smelting pots seized as part of the arrests
Police seized smelting pots, casts, and metal molds believed to have been used to transform the missing gold. Photo by Peel Regional Police

Paramalingam and another unnamed person from Toronto flew from Toronto to New York City to deliver money to King-Mclean. Five days later, Paramalingam flew back to Toronto via Miami.

While King-Mclean stayed at an Airbnb in Fort Lauderdale, he allegedly took several photos with his phone of guns and large amounts of U.S. currency. He left Florida in August 2023 in a rental vehicle and drove north.

That’s when he was stopped by state troopers.

Nine people have been identified or charged in their probe.

The five arrested in Canada are: Parmpal Sidhu, 54, of Brampton who was named as an Air Canada employee. He is charged with theft over $5,000 and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence; Amit Jalota, 40, from Oakville, charged with possession of property obtained by crime, theft over $5,000, and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence; Ammad Chaudhary, 43, from Georgetown, charged with accessory after the fact; Ali Raza, a 37-year-old jewelry store owner from Toronto, charged with possession of property obtained by crime; and Paramalingam, charged with accessory after the fact.

Advertisement 9

Article content

Paramalingam also faces charges in the United States of conspiracy to traffic in firearms and attempting to unlawfully export firearms. The United States is seeking his extradition, said Ben Benson with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, known as the ATF.

King-Mclean, the alleged driver, is formally listed as wanted by Peel police, although he is in custody in the United States.

Recommended from Editorial

  1. Mug shot of Durante King-Mclean, 25, after his U.S. arrest last year.

    Arrests in $20-million Toronto airport gold heist stem from cross-border gun running plot

  2. Air Canada Cargo at Toronto Pearson International Airport, where millions in gold bars and cash was stolen.

    Toronto airport heist ranked 6th biggest gold robbery in history, one year after theft

Peel police are also searching for three other men.

– Simran Preet Panesar, a 31-year-old Brampton man who was an Air Canada employee at the time of the theft but resigned after the heist. He is wanted for theft over $5,000 and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence.

– Archit Grover, 36, from Brampton who is considered a fugitive in Canada and the United States. In Canada he is wanted for theft over $5,000 and conspiracy to commit an indictable offence. In the U.S. he is accused of helping King-Mclean after his roadside arrest and hindering the investigation, including removing possible evidence from the Airbnb that King-Mclean stayed at and arranging a $1,000 payment to the car rental agency for an amended rental agreement.

Advertisement 10

Article content

– Arsalan Chaudhary, 42, from Mississauga, wanted for theft over $5,000, possession of property obtained by crime and conspiracy to commit and indictable offence.

Peter Fitzpatrick, a spokesman for Air Canada confirmed that two of those suspected in the heist worked for Air Canada’s cargo division at the time.

“One left the company prior to the arrests announced today and the second has been suspended,” he said. “We thank the police for their diligent efforts in investigating this matter. As this is now before the courts, we are limited in our ability to comment further.”

Kelly McNeff, a spokeswoman for Brink’s, said the company wouldn’t comment on the alleged inside job at Air Canada because Brink’s is suing the airline for negligence in the theft.

“We are pleased to know the identities and to hear of the arrests of the individuals,” she said. She thanked police for their diligence and said the company would continue to cooperate in any investigation.

Police said the investigation continues.

• Email: ahumphreys@postmedia.com | X:

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.

Article content

Get the latest from Adrian Humphreys straight to your inbox

Comments

Join the Conversation

This Week in Flyers

Adblock test (Why?)

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending