Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Nancy Macdonald, Greg Mercer, Simon Houpt
Publication Date: November 8, 2024 - 05:00
Canada Soccer staffer complained to then-top executive about alleged orders to spy one year before drone scandal
November 8, 2024
In August, 2023, roughly a year before Canada’s women’s soccer team was enveloped in scandal after a staffer was caught using a drone at the Paris Olympics to watch an opponent’s practice, the top executive of the country’s national soccer organization received a complaint from a staff member about colleagues allegedly being directed to spy on competitors.Jason deVos, who at the time was the interim general secretary of Canada Soccer, was told directly by a staff member that junior analysts with the national program were being instructed – sometimes against the analysts’ objections – to clandestinely observe opposing teams, materials reviewed by The Globe and Mail show.
British Columbia’s top Mountie says rolling out body-worn cameras for officers in the province will address calls to “enhance public trust,” but a sociologist who studies technology’s effect on policing says evidence of it reducing use-of-force incidents is “inconsistent.”Deputy Commissioner Dwayne McDonald, commanding officer of the RCMP’s E Division in B.C., said Thursday that the initiative to have front-line officers in B.C. wear the cameras is the “largest and most ambitious rollout of body cameras across the province.”“The introduction of the cameras is now the national standard...
November 21, 2024 - 19:52 | Darryl Greer | The Globe and Mail
Since its inception, the Professional Women’s Hockey League has sought to break new ground with innovative rules.During its inaugural season, the league made waves by introducing the “Jail Break Rule,” where a team can end a penalty kill by scoring a short-handed goal.This season, the league has introduced another new initiative on the penalty kill. Four of six teams in the league got their first taste of it during preseason games on Wednesday in Montreal and Toronto.
November 21, 2024 - 19:13 | Michel Lamarche | The Globe and Mail
One of the Ottawa police officers who arrested Abdirahman Abdi in a violent 2016 altercation that sparked outrage and debate about police handling of Black men after Abdi died the next day says Abdi's race had "absolutely" nothing to do with how he dealt with the 38-year-old Somali Canadian.
November 21, 2024 - 19:04 | | CBC News - Ottawa
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