Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Fri. March 13th, 2026 | Page 6 | Unpublished
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Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: March 13, 2026 - 18:01

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Hour 2 of Ottawa Now for Fri. March 13th, 2026

March 13, 2026

When it comes to finding items that criminals try to hide, the Ottawa Police Service has a secret weapon in their back pocket. Or, to be more precise, a 2-year-old Black Labrador walking on all four paws. Her name is Piper, an Electronic Storage Detection K9 who has a particular set of skills. She has been trained to detect the scent of a chemical found in USB sticks, SD cards, cellphones, AirTags, and even hard drives. These scents, if you can believe it, cannot be detected by the human nose. Kristy Cameron checks in with Ottawa Police Detective Dominic Paykarimah, who works at the service’s Internet Child Exploitation Unit. Of course, we also hear from Piper, the star of today’s show. Plus, we’ve got a public transit update, as crews continue to repair parts of Line 1 following Wednesday’s ice storm. Will the service return to normal this weekend? We take you live to OC Transpo HQ as Hour 2 winds down.



Unpublished Newswire

 
The owner of an Ontario trucking company has admitted he was the secret boss behind a hyperactive network of commercial truckers smuggling large loads of cocaine and meth from the United States into Canada. Guramrit Sidhu, 62, of Brampton, Ont., also known as “King,” pleaded guilty in Los Angeles to engaging in a continuing criminal enterprise on Thursday, after he was arrested in Canada in 2024 as the lead defendant in a sprawling international investigation. In return for Sidhu pleading guilty to one of 17 charges he was facing, U.S. prosecutors agreed to not seek a sentence...
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For much of my career, the stability of the global economic system depended on decisions taken in Washington, DC—and on whether those decisions were bound by rules or by discretion. Working with American officials for decades, across multiple administrations and institutions, my years living in Washington were part of that experience. In moments of real pressure, I saw first-hand the seriousness with which many approached power—particularly the understanding that power must be constrained if it is to be legitimate and durable. That understanding mattered, and it shaped outcomes. I was...
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