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Parole board ‘working’ to have Bernardo victims’ families attend hearing in-person

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The Parole Board of Canada says it is now working to allow victims’ families to attend Paul Bernardo’s parole hearing and deliver their victim impact statements in person.

A lawyer representing the families of two teenage girls murdered by notorious killer and serial rapist Paul Bernardo said they had been denied the right to deliver their statements in person at Bernardo’s upcoming parole hearing. The issue was raised by Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre during question period in the House of Commons Wednesday.

However, in a statement late Wednesday, the parole board it is now “currently working to accommodate the in-person presentation of statements by victims” who wish to appear at the Nov. 26 hearing.

In a letter sent to the Parole Board of Canada chairperson and others, lawyer Tim Danson had said he was recently informed the victims’ families would not be able to attend the hearing at the medium-security La Macaza Institution in Quebec because the board was “unable to ensure safety and security of all hearing attendees.”

Danson had said the families demanded the hearing be adjourned to next month or some other date so they and their lawyers can travel to La Macaza and read their victim impact statements in person.

In its statement, the parole board said it takes a wide range of factors into consideration when scheduling hearings, including the board’s “ability to accommodate all observers in an institutional hearing room, to ensure the safe proximity of all attendees during the hearing, or operational considerations such as hearing management.”

It said it “makes every effort to accommodate a victim’s requested method of attendance.” The statement added that all victims’ statements carry the same weight, whether they are delivered in person or not, and noted that most of its hearings are held virtually.

Bernardo was transferred from the maximum-security Millhaven Institution in Ontario to the medium-security La Macaza last year, a decision that prompted public outcry.

Bernardo, who is designated as a dangerous offender, is serving an indeterminate life sentence for the kidnapping, sexual assault and murder of 15-year-old Kristen French and 14-year-old Leslie Mahaffy in the early 1990s near St. Catharines, Ont.

He was also convicted of manslaughter in the December 1990 death of his then-wife Karla Homolka’s 15-year-old sister, Tammy.

In a statement, a spokesperson for federal Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc said the Parole Board, as a quasi-judicial body, makes its decisions independently.

“Our hearts go out to the families of the victims, who continue to live with the trauma caused by this individual’s abominable crimes,” LeBlanc’s press secretary Gabriel Brunet wrote.

Speaking to reporters on Parliament Hill on Wednesday morning, Conservative MP Frank Caputo said the decision to deny the families the right to attend was “so wrong on so many levels.”

“Why is it that the safety and security of the jail in this instance is preventing people from exercising their rights under the Victims Bill of Rights?” said Caputo, one of the party’s critics for justice and public safety.

The federal ombudsperson for victims of crime, Benjamin Roebuck, said in a statement that victims’ preferences about attending a hearing in person or virtually are taken into account, but not guaranteed.

“Parole hearings happen within highly secured environments, so if there are specific safety or security concerns that have been used to determine the format of a hearing, they should be clearly explained,” Roebuck said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 20, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Alberta’s privacy commissioner raises concerns over two government bills

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EDMONTON – Alberta’s information and privacy commissioner says she has big concerns – including fuzzy definitions and insufficient guardrails – in two bills now being debated in the house.

The bills aim to amend existing access to information and privacy rules and are touted by Premier Danielle Smith’s government as being the strictest privacy regulations in Canada.

But commissioner Diane McLeod says, to the contrary, the government would be creating legislative holes if the bills are approved.

McLeod outlined her concerns and suggested changes in letters sent Wednesday to the sponsors of the bills: Technology Minister Nate Glubish and Service Alberta Minister Dale Nally.

Glubish’s bill would create a separate act for the protection of privacy while Nally’s bill proposes changes to freedom of information rules. 

McLeod noted Glubish’s bill would allow the personal information of a minor to be shared without that minor’s permission if doing so was deemed to be in the youth’s best interest.

McLeod noted that the bill isn’t clear on who would be responsible for determining the best interests of minors, nor is it clear what best interest means.

“If disclosure is truly ‘in the best interests of a minor’ then it should be with consent,” McLeod wrote.

The commissioner’s letter also says Glubish’s changes don’t account for privacy risks when government bodies use “automated systems” to collect and make decisions around personal data.

McLeod wrote that it isn’t clear what an automated system even refers to or if artificial intelligence would be involved. She says privacy guardrails are therefore critical.

When it comes to changes put forward by Nally to Alberta’s freedom of information rules, “there are many grounds for concern,” McLeod wrote.

She wrote that the proposed changes give the government more power to avoid disclosing information to the public by including in the exempted correspondence “virtually all communication between political staff and (members of cabinet).”

Nally defended this change Wednesday, saying that such electronic communication should be confidential as freedom of information “is about access to government documents, not about political conversation.”

McLeod’s letter says she is also concerned about broad disclosure exemptions for government records relating to labour relations and “workplace investigations,” both of which the bill doesn’t provide a definition for. The letter also says the bill appears to exempt the disclosure of data kept in government databases.

“In my view, this amendment takes access rights a step back, not forward,” she wrote.

Glubish and Nally told reporters they will review McLeod’s concerns and recommendations over the coming days. Glubish also said that the government gave McLeod “unprecedented access” to the development of the legislation, but in a statement Wednesday, McLeod said her office didn’t see the finished bills until they were introduced in the legislature.

Both bills have passed first reading in the assembly and will need to be read and debated three more times before receiving royal assent.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 20, 2024.

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Nvidia beats earnings expectations as investors eye demand for Blackwell AI chips

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Nvidia on Wednesday reported a surge in third-quarter profit and sales as demand for its specialized computer chips that power artificial intelligence systems remains robust.

For the three months that ended Oct. 27, the tech giant based in Santa Clara, California, posted revenue of $35.08 billion, up 94% from $18.12 billion a year ago.

Nvidia said it earned $19.31 billion in the quarter, more than double the $9.24 billion it posted in last year’s third quarter. Adjusted for one-time items, it earned 81 cents a share.

Wall Street analysts had been expecting adjusted earnings of 75 cents a share on revenue of $33.17 billion, according to FactSet.

Investors took the results in stride, however, and Nvidia’s high-flying stock slipped about 1% in after-hours trading. Shares in Nvidia Corp. are up 195% so far this year.

“The age of AI is in full steam, propelling a global shift to Nvidia computing,” Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia, said in a statement. 

Nvidia’s third-quarter data center revenue was $30.8 billion, up 112% from a year ago. That growth was driven by demand for the Hopper computing platform for large language models, recommendation engines and generative AI applications, the company said.

Analysts’ were eyeing Nvidia’s guidance on its Blackwell graphics processor unit, a next-generation artificial intelligence chip that’s seen demand from companies like OpenAI and others building AI data centers. 

Nvidia Chief Financial Officer Colette Kress said Blackwell production shipments are scheduled to begin in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025 and will continue to ramp into fiscal 2026.

On an earnings call Wednesday, Kress told investors that both Hopper GPU and Blackwell systems “have certain supply constraints, and the demand for Blackwell is expected to exceed supply for several quarters in fiscal 2026.”

“Every customer is racing to be the first to market,” Kress said. “Blackwell is now in the hands of all of our major partners, and they are working to bring up their data centers.”

The company, seen as a bellwether for AI demand, will deliver “more Blackwell than we have previously estimated” this quarter, Huang added.

Nvidia has led the artificial intelligence sector to become one of the stock market’s biggest companies, as tech giants spend heavily on the company’s chips and data centers needed to train and operate their AI systems. 

The company carved out an early lead in AI applications race, in part because of Huang’s successful bet on the chip technology used to fuel the industry. The company is no stranger to big bets. Nvidia’s invention of graphics processor chips, or GPUs, in 1999 helped spark the growth of the PC gaming market and redefined computer graphics. The company’s third quarter gaming revenue rose to $3.3 billion, an increase of 15% from a year ago.

Demand for generative AI products that can compose documents, make images and serve as personal assistants has fueled sales of Nvidia’s specialized chips over the last year. Nvidia, the most valuable publicly traded company by market cap as of Wednesday morning, is now worth over $3.5 trillion, with analysts closely monitoring Nvidia’s path to $4 trillion. 

Dan Ives, an analyst with Wedbush Securities, said the earnings report shows “the AI Revolution is still in the early innings of playing out.” 

“We view this as a Nvidia earnings press release that should be hung in the Louvre,” Ives said. “Blackwell demand is just beginning. Any sell off (in Nvidia’s stock) we would view as short lived, with our view this is a $4 trillion market cap in 2025 as the Godfather of AI Jensen (Huang) drives this spending wave.”

Through the year’s first six months, Nvidia’s stock soared nearly 150%. At that point, the stock was trading at a little more than 100 times the company’s earnings over the prior 12 months. That’s much more expensive than it’s been historically and than the S&P 500 in general. 

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Estate sale Emily Carr painting bought for US$50 nets C$290,000 at Toronto auction

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TORONTO – An Emily Carr painting that sold for US$50 at an estate sale has fetched C$290,000 at a Toronto auction.

Heffel Fine Art Auction House says “Masset, Q.C.I.” sold for $290,000 at its fall sale Wednesday night.

That’s above a presale estimate of $100,000 to $200,000, and does not include auction house fees.

The oil on canvas painting depicts a carved grizzly bear atop a memorial totem pole in the village of Masset, B.C., on Haida Gwaii.

It was discovered several months ago at a barn sale in the Hamptons, where a New York-based art dealer bought it for US$50.

“Masset, Q.C.I.” was painted in 1912 as part of Carr’s efforts to create an extensive record of the artistic heritage of First Nations communities in British Columbia. 

It’s believed to have been a gift to Carr’s friend Nell Cozier and her husband in the 1930s and has been hanging in a barn in the Hamptons since. The couple had moved to the area to work as caretakers for a large estate after originally living in Victoria.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 20, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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