Thursday, November 25, 2004
Pot proud
I’m sure our government is proud of this latest study.
THE NUMBER of young Canadians smoking pot and injecting drugs has doubled over the last decade, according to a groundbreaking national study.
Certainly fits with their plan to decriminalize pot. What a generation we are bringing up.
Monday, September 6, 2004
Soft touch
Yes, even child killers and cop killers, at least female ones, get the soft glove treatment by our Correctional System.
But most of us probably imagined that child and cop killers did a few years of hard time, that the despicable nature of their crimes counted for something, even within the confines of a properly civilized prison system. Now we know they don’t, and it doesn’t.
Surely you knew that, liberal Canadians?
Wednesday, September 1, 2004
Fade to black
Things certainly don’t look good for Mr. Black.
Conrad Black and his cronies plundered hundreds of millions of dollars from Hollinger International Inc. while its high-profile board did nothing to stop him, according to a scathing report commissioned by the publishing company.
Mr. Black has always been a little flamboyant in his prose, let’s see him talk his way out of this one. If the report is even 10% true, he and his directors should go to jail. Just because he didn’t grab the old lady’s purse on the street doesn’t make him any less a crook.
Wednesday, August 11, 2004
Murderer revolving door
Out comes another ‘rehabiliated’ home invasion murderer from Canada’s justice industry, in comes another innocent victim to the morgue.
Eric Fish, 42, is charged with first-degree murder in the beating death of 75-year-old William Abramenko last week.
Fish, who was on parole for an earlier murder in Ontario, had walked away from the John Howard Society halfway house back on June 21.
Keep voting Liberal, sheeple!
Monday, August 9, 2004
Damn lucky
Here’s one very lucky guy.
But Taylor called Nichols a “terrorist,” saying the redemption and atonement Nichols seeks is only the beginning.
“Your criminal acts in this case are historic in proportion,” the judge said. “No American citizen has ever brought this kind of devastation. You are . . . the No. 1 mass murderer in all of U.S. history. What could motivate you to do this? There are no answers.”
I’m flabbergasted that he averted the death penality.
Saturday, August 7, 2004
Before you give…
Unless you’re selling chocolate bars, don’t come knocking on my door looking for money.
Booze, cigarettes, dinners, groceries, mysterious cash payments and trips to a casino. Along with exorbitant fundraising costs, that’s how a bogus Parkinson’s disease charity frittered away more than $1 million in donations from a generous public, according to a government audit.
The damage these con-artists cause to real charities is immense. Not surprising that the government is somehow involved, albeit in a small way. More proof that Canadians have got to kick their government habit. It it doesn’t kill them, it surely will bankrupt them.
Here we go again
Once more, the government just doesn’t see why taxing cigarettes doesn’t work.
“The price of cigarettes has gone up so much, it’s a hot commodity right now,” says Detective Jeff Zammit of Crime Stoppers. He estimates at least 15 stores have been robbed in the past two weeks, about one a day.
Cigarettes are clear examples of overtaxation. The massive underground economy in other goods and services is not so clear.
It seems we have gone well over the bell curve of diminished returns when it comes to raising taxes.
Thursday, August 5, 2004
I know the feeling
Why does getting a parking ticket make people so damn angry?
On Monday, August 11, 2003, Parking Enforcement Officer Kathryn Lynn was issuing a parking tag near 53 Belvedere Avenue in 13 Division. She was approached by the owner of the vehicle, who grabbed the tag, crumpled it up and then threw it at her, hitting her in the face. Then, with his hand in his pant pocket, pointed a finger to make it look like he had a gun in his pocket, said he was going to shoot and kill her.
Tuesday, July 27, 2004
A job well done
Blatchford writes that it was good police work that solved the Cecilia case. Take a bow, boys in blue.
For the detectives who believe they have solved this case, the message is to follow the evidence, regardless of the rising pressure—internal and external both—to make a quick arrest in a high-profile crime.
Follow the evidence is in fact what Toronto front-line officers did, although sometimes they were being second-guessed along the way by their superiors, who argued that they should look harder at Cecilia’s mom and dad.
Wednesday, July 21, 2004
Hard to find sympathy
Only the exteme bleeding hearts will be sad about this story.
Andrea Yates, who is serving a life sentence for drowning her children in a bathtub three years ago, has been hospitalized because she is refusing to eat,
Saturday, July 10, 2004
Chilling story
More proof that pedophiles are incurable and very dangerous, and our “justice” system has no idea what to do with them.
Douglas Donald Moore was a child abuse victim turned child abuser.
Wednesday, July 7, 2004
Rapist wants back in
Either prison is really great, or even the prisoners feel that their sentences are too lenient. Why else would a labeled psychopath practically beg to return to prison?
A violent sex offender described as an ``incurable psychopath” opted today to go back to jail for two years rather than fight charges that he threatened reporters just a day after his release from prison.
Liberal emphasis has always been to rehabilitate over punish, yet this case illustrates that it does neither well. Welcome to the mushy middle of mediocrity.
Sunday, June 20, 2004
Good time for CP
In light of another murder in Toronto, it’s a wonder why the Conservatives haven’t said a word about capital punishment. How far away from Reform have they moved?
Friday, June 18, 2004
Tell the children to scream
I am annoyed by the media’s insistence to never mention capital punishment for the lowest form of human beings convicted of child sex murders, and fixating over child pornography. There always seems to be a need to find something easy to blame and quick fix, instead of confronting and dealing with evil. Does no-one believe anymore that the threat of hanging may have entered Mr. Briere’s mind before he set out to commit his evil act? Since he stewed over the crime for at least a year, surely this thought may have entered his mind, and possibly prevented a murder.
As usual, Blatchford’s writing sends chills down my spine - her being the pre-eminent writer in Canada on crime.
The capper to her piece is good advice from, no less, the expert himself:
One of the remarks that was edited out, The Globe has learned, was what Mr. Briere told detectives when, at the end of his confession, they asked if he had anything else to say.
“Tell parents,” he said, “to tell the children to scream.”
Thursday, June 17, 2004
It began with child porn
The disgusting story of child sex-killer Briere surely must move even the most liberal liberals to increase punishments for the worst killers among us.
In shocking detail, the sequence of events were read out to the court - a crime that was spurred by Briere’s viewing of child pornography on the Internet on the night of May 12, 2003.
Aroused after seeing the images and unable to control himself, he went onto the street in the west-end neighbourhood known as the Junction, saw Holly on a street corner as she walked home from a friend’s house, grabbed her by the neck and took her through a laneway to his apartment.
Inside, the 36-year-old Montreal native sexually assaulted her, strangled and dismembered her - all in about an hour.
Remember what party outlawed capital punishment when you vote June 28. (hint for new voters: it was the Liberals.)
Tuesday, June 15, 2004
Teen justice
I support this justice initiative.
A program that has helped young offenders turn around their lives, often by facing their victims, is about to be expanded to some of Toronto’s most troubled communities.
See, us social conservatives do support common sense ideas before we send these kids away to pound rocks. I’ve always agreed that teenagers deserve a second chance before they throw their whole lives away. Let’s hope this plan makes a difference.
Justice for Farah
This is a reasonable sentence, all things considered.
KANEEZ FATIMA must spend 15 years in prison before she can seek parole for her role in the “barbaric” murder of her 5-year-old stepdaughter, Farah Khan, a judge ruled yesterday...Watt said he, like the jury, rejected Fatima’s version that she tried to save Farah but was repelled by Khan, who was in a homicidal rage.
Wednesday, June 9, 2004
Kill him
Am I way off base when I think the animal that raped this little girl should be executed?
The girl, who had been sexually assaulted and badly beaten, was later found screaming for help in a nearby shed.
“He’s not human. He’s a monster,” her grandma said.
Let’s see what our justice system gives this guy.
Kudos to the police for saving this girl. Hey Mayor Miller - a helicopter found this guy. Wake up and get Toronto one too.
Tuesday, June 1, 2004
Charge the CAS too
It’s amazing that 15 year olds are allowed to keep their babies - especially when you read stories like this.
:neale:A 16-month-old baby girl was brutally beaten for hours in a River Heights condo before dying of her injuries in what police call the worst assault on a child they’ve ever seen. The tot’s 15-year-old mother has been charged with criminal negligence causing death, while the teen’s 21-year-old boyfriend has been charged with second-degree murder.
Saturday, May 22, 2004
Rob test 1
Wednesday, May 19, 2004
Picking on the weak
Man, the bad guys can’t get any lower than granny killing.
JEANNE GOULD could have been living safe and sound in a seniors home but stayed in her Newmarket house one last week to wrap up its sale, including some of her own art. Those arrangements may have attracted the burglar that killed her, her son said yesterday.
Sunday, May 16, 2004
Bring back CP
Killers of children and and cops definitely deserve the death penalty.
Bring Back CP to Canada now!Police have charged an 18-year-old Cobourg, Ont., man with first-degree murder in the weekend slaying of a police officer.
Saturday, May 15, 2004
Help a cabbie
This poor cabbie is lucky to be alive.
A TORONTO cabbie who was badly beaten over a fare dispute this week is on the mend, but he has a tough road ahead. Knowing Mozammel Hossain won’t be able to get back behind the wheel any time soon, the cab company that employs the 43-year-old has set up a trust fund to take care of his wife and three kids so he can focus on getting better.
Friday, May 14, 2004
Female killers
You don’t read much about rich, female killers.
“This is one of the most brutal, overkill homicides we’ve experienced in many years,” Dwyer said Thursday. “He was brutalized on his back, head, legs, face with a knife and other instruments.”
Thursday, May 13, 2004
Un-Human
Parents abusing their kids is akin to torture. These two victims are amazing examples of human resilience. Imagine having the will to forgive and continue to live in a normal fashion.
TWO PORT Perry-area teens at the heart of one of the worst child abuse cases in Canadian history spoke out in an Oshawa court yesterday about their horrifying 13-year ordeal.
The will to live, despite one’s conditions and past, is an incredibile human trait. Now lock away the evil aunt in a cage no bigger than the one she made for her kids.






