Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

British Man Stunned After Six-Day Detention For Drug Test On Friend's Ashes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2016 12:32 PM
    HALIFAX — A British man who was jailed six days after Canadian border agents carried out a drug test on a recently deceased friend's ashes says he's upset it took so long before a retest allowed his release.
     
    Russell Laight, 41, was travelling from Britain to Nova Scotia when his flight was diverted to St. John's, NL, due to a storm on March 2.
     
    He says when he landed he was "gobsmacked" when Canada Border Services Agency agents took him aside to say a test showed the ashes of a boyhood friend he was bringing to friends in Nova Scotia turned out to have tested positive for an illegal drug.
     
    Laight says after being arrested and charged, he was asked for a large sum for bail, and declined because he felt that further information would show he was innocent of any wrongdoing.
     
    He says a follow up test by Health Canada, requested by his lawyer, countered the first result, and Laight carried on to Halifax without the ashes.
     
    The British man from Stourport-on-Severn and the Halifax friends he's staying with — Rich Croft and Tracey Jonasson — say in future the agency needs to ensure that secondary tests are carried out immediately to avoid improperly detaining people.
     
    Laight also says he realizes he should have filled out proper forms in order to transport human remains.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash
    A female passenger in the back seat of the car was pronounced dead at the scene.

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash

    Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit

    Finance Minister Joe Ceci has already announced that with no end in sight to bargain basement oil prices, the budget he unveils in early April will be about double the original deficit estimate of $5.4 billion.

    Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit

    Deciding On Assisted Death In Context Of Mental Illness Highly Complex: Experts

    The court made no specific pronouncement about medically assisted dying for those with a psychiatric illness, and that has left mental health experts wondering how its  decision might be interpreted — and what that could mean for such a vulnerable segment of the population.

    Deciding On Assisted Death In Context Of Mental Illness Highly Complex: Experts

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan
    "After living somewhere else for all these years she returned to her village along with her three-year-old daughter to meet her family and in-laws." 

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan

    Saskatchewan NDP Would Scrap Some Ambulance Fees They Say Hurt Rural Residents

    Saskatchewan NDP Would Scrap Some Ambulance Fees They Say Hurt Rural Residents
    NDP Leader Cam Broten also promises the party will scrap a per-kilometre rate for ambulances if it wins next month's provincial election.

    Saskatchewan NDP Would Scrap Some Ambulance Fees They Say Hurt Rural Residents

    Former US First Lady Nancy Reagan Dies At 94

    Former US First Lady Nancy Reagan Dies At 94
    ABC News received a statement from a family spokesperson saying that Reagan died this morning at her home in Los Angeles.

    Former US First Lady Nancy Reagan Dies At 94