| Page 252 | Unpublished
Hello!

Unpublished Newswire

Andrew Pinsent is filling in for Kristy Cameron, and we all know what he’s watching tonight! Canada’s Team is getting ready to host its first World Series game since 1993, as the Toronto Blue Jays welcome the visiting L.A. Dodgers to Rogers Centre. Mackenzie Braithwaite won tickets to tonight’s Game 1 tilt through the Rogers ‘Bring It Home’ Contest. She joins us by train in Hour 1. Meantime, if you are a fan of Ottawa songwriter Michelle Treacy, she’s releasing new material! Details on that will be forthcoming after some Blue Jays talk. But first, we...
October 24, 2025 - 18:00 | | CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon's comments come at a time of rising concerns about the risks of chatbots to children, including mental health issues.
October 24, 2025 - 17:54 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Canada
An Ontario judge has stayed first-degree murder charges against three men in an alleged “execution-style” killing after concluding that their Charter rights were violated at a Milton, Ont., incarceration facility.Superior Court Justice Clayton Conlan says in his ruling that Joseph Richard Whitlock, Kulvir Singh Bhatia and Karn Veer Sandhu were subjected to “torturous state actions” at the Maplehurst Correctional Complex in December 2023.
October 24, 2025 - 17:44 | | The Globe and Mail
A man accused of aggravated assault for stabbing three people at a Vancouver Chinatown festival, in an attack that prompted debate over the handling of some psychiatric patients, has been found not criminally responsible due to a mental disorder.B.C. Supreme Court Justice Eric Gottardi said Friday that the court doesn’t convict people of crimes for being sick.
October 24, 2025 - 17:43 | Ashley Joannou | The Globe and Mail
Inuit Me Too is picking up steam with Nunavut's senator weighing in calling for abusive men to be removed from leadership roles, echoing the national Inuit organization
October 24, 2025 - 17:40 | Melissa Ridgen | Global News - Canada
The lawyer representing the Cowichan Tribes says he is “frustrated and disappointed” with what he calls “misinformation” about his clients’ ground-breaking Aboriginal title case in Richmond, B.C.David Rosenberg says his clients are not targeting privately held land in the title area on the Fraser River and that if the province negotiates in good faith, the “likely outcome” is a treaty recognizing Aboriginal title while allowing private owners to continue to hold fee-simple title.
October 24, 2025 - 17:15 | Wolfgang Depner | The Globe and Mail