Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feroz Buksh, Accused Store Robber With Imitation Gun Cries For Hot Food, Money For Bill

The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2014 10:56 AM
  • Feroz Buksh, Accused Store Robber With Imitation Gun Cries For Hot Food, Money For Bill
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A man who broke down in tears while robbing a store told a clerk he needed hot food, cigarettes and money to pay bills, court has heard.
 
Feroz Buksh of Surrey, B.C., pleaded guilty in provincial court to one count each of robbery and use of an imitation firearm.
 
Court heard Buksh, 44, walked into a store in Kamloops on Sept. 19 and asked the clerk for some hot food and 10 packs of cigarettes.
 
He tried to pay for the items with a pre-paid Visa card, but the transaction was not approved.
 
“He then opened up his shirt and said, ‘Give me the money in the till. I have a gun and I’m not afraid to use it,’” Crown lawyer Chris Balison told court.
 
“Then he began to cry. He said he was going to use the money to pay for his bills and that he was in the process of a divorce.”
 
Balison said Buksh took the money and put the cigarettes and food into a bag.
 
“He ran out of the store and his bag actually broke,” Balison said.
 
“So, he was running out of the store with things falling from his bag, including the cigarettes.”
 
Buksh, who had no prior criminal record, was found by police a short time later, hiding in a closet at a home where he’d been staying.
 
The Crown wants Buksh, a Fiji native whose family came to Canada when he was 12, jailed for 18 months.
 
However, Judge Stephen Harrison asked lawyers to look into the impact such a sentence could have on Buksh’s status as a permanent Canadian resident.
 
“Sometimes, matters in criminal court can have a tremendous effect on someone who is merely a permanent resident,” Harrison said of the man who is not a Canadian citizen.
 
“It can have an impact on whether or not someone is removed from the country.”
 
Buksh, who is in custody, will be back in court on Jan. 8 to fix a date for sentencing. (Kamloops This Week)

MORE National ARTICLES

Injury lawyer and son of John Crosbie seeks Conservative nod in Newfoundland

Injury lawyer and son of John Crosbie seeks Conservative nod in Newfoundland
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Ches Crosbie comes from a distinguished line of Newfoundland and Labrador politicians and hopes to continue that tradition by running for the federal Conservatives.

Injury lawyer and son of John Crosbie seeks Conservative nod in Newfoundland

Mass Wildrose migration to PCs a month in the making, says Premier Jim Prentice

Mass Wildrose migration to PCs a month in the making, says Premier Jim Prentice
EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Jim Prentice says an emissary from the Wildrose approached his team a month ago to pitch a group floor crossing.

Mass Wildrose migration to PCs a month in the making, says Premier Jim Prentice

Nova Scotia law society defends decision to bar students from proposed school

Nova Scotia law society defends decision to bar students from proposed school
HALIFAX — The Nova Scotia Barristers' Society has the authority to deny accreditation to graduates from a Christian university in British Columbia that requires students to abstain from sex outside heterosexual marriage, a lawyer for the self-regulating body told a court hearing Thursday.

Nova Scotia law society defends decision to bar students from proposed school

UPDATES: Dalhousie University students face restorative justice for Facebook posts

UPDATES: Dalhousie University students face restorative justice for Facebook posts
HALIFAX — Dalhousie University is proceeding with a restorative justice process to resolve complaints about sexually violent comments posted on a Facebook group page about female dentistry students, the university's president said Wednesday.

UPDATES: Dalhousie University students face restorative justice for Facebook posts

Alberta Wildrose opposition shatters in mass exodus, wants premier to succeed

Alberta Wildrose opposition shatters in mass exodus, wants premier to succeed
EDMONTON — The leader of Alberta's Official Opposition shattered her caucus Wednesday by leading an en masse floor crossing, saying she no longer had the fire in the belly to oppose Premier Jim Prentice.

Alberta Wildrose opposition shatters in mass exodus, wants premier to succeed

TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn

TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn
CALGARY — The CEO of TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) says he doesn't see the oil industry's appetite for new pipelines faltering even though crude prices have skidded recently to the lowest in more than five-years.

TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn