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Unpublished Newswire

Telling a client to take a burner phone with them to the U.S. is “the stupidest advice” you could give, says a Toronto-based immigration lawyer. Canadians travelling to the U.S. are facing increased scrutiny by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers, which has led to fears of detainment or denial of entry based on the contents of travellers’ devices. However, presenting a burner phone is the equivalent of “turning the lights off” and then telling a border officer, “Okay, now search me,” says Evan Green, one of the two managing partners, with Green and Spiegel. “It’s an...
April 10, 2025 - 07:06 | Stewart Lewis | National Post
San Joaquin County sheriff’s deputies have arrested a woman after finding the bodies of 27 dead horses and other malnourished animals on her property in Clement, California, which is about 40 miles (64km) from Sacramento. Jan Johnson, 62, was charged...
January 23, 2025 - 16:08 | National Post Staff | National Post
The trial of an Ottawa nun accused of sexual assault against a former student at a northern Ontario residential school in the 1960s and 1970s, will not proceed. Francoise Seguin, 98, a nun with the Sisters of Charity of Ottawa, was scheduled to enter her plea regarding three counts of gross...
January 16, 2025 - 17:03 | National Post Staff | National Post
Cape Breton tuna fisherman A.D. MacLean had encountered sharks before, but it wasn’t until mid-October that he encountered his first Great White. Similar to Ernest Hemingway’s novel The Old Man and the Sea, this shark was attracted by the tuna that MacLean and his crew had just caught. After catching a tuna, says MacLean, it’s necessary to “swim the fish” near the boat. That lowers its body temperature and keeps the meat from spoiling, he explains. He and his crew did that with their catch as they pointed their boat, Makin’ Wake, toward their home port of Mabou, Cape Breton, Nova...
October 29, 2024 - 13:45 | Stewart Lewis | National Post