Saturday, January 06, 2007

Do the Irvings own shares in the Globe and Mail newspaper???


irving
Originally uploaded by Oldmaison.
A few weeks someone suggested to me that I write a letter to the editor in the Toronto Globe and Mail newspaper.

I quickly answered - Nahhhh..... They don’t print letters from New Brunswick.

The individual wrote a letter and it wasn’t printed.

I was given this little editorial.

It’s about a lawyer who was falsely arrested? I wonder if he was forced on the ground???

Question? I wonder why the Globe and Mail never covered my trial or the verdict?

I mean? If it was in the New York Times? Shouldn’t the story have been in the Globe and Mail also?

Do the Irvings own shares of the Globe and Mail?

Globe and mail


The lawyer had no pie

The Globe and Mail

Routine violations of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms by the big-city police who detained Vancouver lawyer Alan Ward should come as a deep disappointment to the public. Mr. Ward, who has a 20-year-plus career of representing protesters and people with complaints against the police, found himself suspected — wrongly — of intending to throw a pie at then prime minister Jean Chrétien four years ago. In following their suspicions, Vancouver police acted in good faith and showed no malice or brutality. Yet the police, not just constables but their supervisors, still managed to ignore Mr. Ward's basic rights.

Mr. Ward was stopped by police after someone in Mr. Chrétien's entourage reported that a white male in a T-shirt had been overheard to say he intended to “pie” the prime minister. Mr. Ward is white and was wearing a T-shirt. When Mr. Ward began to yell at the officer who stopped him, he was handcuffed and detained for breach of the peace. Police said they were investigating him on suspicion of either pieing or intending to pie the prime minister. No Charter problem so far.

The police had the right to detain Mr. Ward for as long as the prime minister was in the vicinity, a judge said this week. But they held him — in a tiny cell three feet by six feet — and left him there for roughly four hours after the prime minister had left. He had no pie, was nowhere near the prime minister, and no report of a pieing had been made. The officers had no grounds to hold him. His supposedly short-term detention had become wrongful imprisonment under the Charter.

And why was he strip-searched? Because of an incoherent and illegal policy, drafted by the provincial corrections department and Vancouver police, that began unequivocally: “A strip search will be done for new prisoners.” (The rest of the policy set out factors to consider in individual cases when deciding if a pat-down search with a metal detector is enough.) The Supreme Court of Canada could hardly have been clearer in 2001: “Strip searches cannot be carried out as a matter of routine police-department policy applicable to all arrestees, whether they are arrested for impaired driving, public drunkenness, shoplifting or trafficking in narcotics.” A judge awarded Mr. Ward $10,100 in damages, of which $5,000 was to make up for the illegal strip search. If his case is indicative of how minor suspects are treated in custody in British Columbia, as it seems to be, there's a problem.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

So your arrest should get you a few grand Charles, but it'll take four years! I disagree with the Globe and Mail about the police actions, so if I tell a cop I think a guy in a parka is going to pie Graham, they have the right to arrest every white guy in a parka? Isn't that just about everybody? So I can be walking down the street and say a joke about robbing a store and somebody who overhears can call the cops for something they think I 'intend' to do?

That's pretty scary stuff. You have freedome of speech, so long as you don't use it.

Anonymous said...

Get over yourself Charles, Not all media in the country needs to cover your story. You got off and got some interviews, now get over it.

You are starting to become a glory hog.

Do what you do best which is walk around taking pictures of people without their permision and complain

Blogger Charles LeBlanc said...

I believe that you're missing the point.

This is a story of a lawyer who was single up by the police.

It made the National newspaper.

In my case? I was also singled out. forced on the ground, Asaulted, paraded and jailed!!!

Ohhhhhh???? The Saint John Police Force deleted over 200 pictures!!!!

and you say move on????

As for pictures??? I love taking pictures and you must enjoy them because you're always here!!!!

Keep watching for more good pictures!!!!

Ohhhh? The

Anonymous said...

I think they meant the tendency to read something conspiratorial into everything. Just because the Globe and Mail didn't do a story doesn't mean they are in league with Irving. But I disagree that your becoming a glory hog, you've always been that, but not in an annoying way. This is about you, but not the Globe and Mail.

Anonymous said...

It's probably because the letter is three or four times the length of a usual Globe letter.

Blogger Charles LeBlanc said...

About me??? Of course it is!!!!