Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alberta's Lisa Seymour-Peters Charged With Threatening Sophie Gregoire Trudeau

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 May, 2017 12:47 PM
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — Police have charged a woman in southern Alberta with making online threats against the prime minister's wife and the Canadian government.
     
    RCMP Cpl. Hal Turnbull said investigators were able to trace the social media account and link it to an address in Lethbridge.
     
    "The threats were allegedly made against the Canadian government as well as against the prime minister's wife, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau," he said Tuesday.
     
    Details of the threats and the social media platform were not released.
     
    Turnbull said Lisa Seymour-Peters, 49, was arrested May 12.
     
    She has been charged with one count under the Criminal Code of uttering threats.
     
     
    Seymour-Peters has been released from custody on the conditions that she not contact or be found within 100 metres of Sophie Gregoire Trudeau or her immediate family. 
     
    As well, she is not to attend any political gathering or function.
     
    She is to appear in Lethbridge provincial court on June 8.
     
    RCMP cautioned people about what they post online.
     
    "Using social media as a means by which to make threats against an individual or a group of people is not to be taken lightly and may result in criminal charges if a police investigation obtains evidence to support the laying of such charges."
     
    Last year an Ontario man was acquitted on charges of making death threats against Gregoire Trudeau.
     
     
    The man was overheard making comments on a Via train and was charged with uttering threats to cause death.
     
    The judge in the case ruled that words alone without context were not enough for a conviction. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Seek Help Identifying Unknown Fire Victim In Surrey

    Police Seek Help Identifying Unknown Fire Victim In Surrey
    Surrey RCMP is asking for the public’s assistance in identifying a person that perished in a shed fire earlier this year in the City Centre area The victim is believed to be of no fixed address.

    Police Seek Help Identifying Unknown Fire Victim In Surrey

    Ontario Man, 25, Wanted In Death Of His Wife, Who Was Nine Months Pregnant

    Ontario Man, 25, Wanted In Death Of His Wife, Who Was Nine Months Pregnant
    Investigators are looking for 25-year-old Nicholas Tyler Baig of Pickering, Ont., who is wanted for second-degree murder.

    Ontario Man, 25, Wanted In Death Of His Wife, Who Was Nine Months Pregnant

    Seven Months Later, Kamloops Police Reveal Details For The First Time Of Murdered Man

    The body of Robert Gair was found on a rural road outside of Kamloops, B.C., last September, but his family wasn't told where his remains were discovered until Friday.

    Seven Months Later, Kamloops Police Reveal Details For The First Time Of Murdered Man

    B.C. Premier More Hopeful For Softwood Lumber Deal Under Trump Than Obama

    B.C. Premier More Hopeful For Softwood Lumber Deal Under Trump Than Obama
    VANCOUVER — Canada is more likely to reach a lasting solution for the softwood lumber trade dispute with the United States now that President Donald Trump is in power instead of Barack Obama, says British Columbia Premier Christy Clark.

    B.C. Premier More Hopeful For Softwood Lumber Deal Under Trump Than Obama

    Man Faces Murder Charge In Winnipeg Woman's Disappearance Last Year

    Man Faces Murder Charge In Winnipeg Woman's Disappearance Last Year
    Christine Wood, from Oxford House First Nation, was last seen by family in Winnipeg on Aug. 19.

    Man Faces Murder Charge In Winnipeg Woman's Disappearance Last Year

    Canadian Aid Agencies Prepare For Influx Of Syrian Refugees After U.S. Airstrikes

    Canadian Aid Agencies Prepare For Influx Of Syrian Refugees After U.S. Airstrikes
    Canadian aid workers in the Middle East are preparing for an influx of asylum-seekers into already crowded camps, fearing U.S. military action in Syria could drive more people out of the wartorn country.

    Canadian Aid Agencies Prepare For Influx Of Syrian Refugees After U.S. Airstrikes