Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

In B.C. First, Aboriginal Woman Named Province's Top Mountie

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2017 11:44 AM
    SURREY, B.C. — The RCMP has a new commander in British Columbia.
     
    Deputy commissioner Brenda Butterworth-Carr is the new commanding officer of E Division, the largest in the country.
     
    Butterworth-Carr is a member of the Tr'ondek Hwech'in Han Nation in Yukon and joined the force as a native special constable in 1987.
     
    She has held many key positions, including assistant district commander in the north district of B.C. and took command of the Prince George detachment in 2009.
     
    Butterworth-Carr was the first female director general of national aboriginal policing and crime prevention services in Ottawa, and became the first aboriginal woman to lead an RCMP division when she took command in Saskatchewan between 2013 and 2016.
     
    A joint process involving the RCMP and provincial officials selected Butterworth-Carr to replace deputy commissioner Craig Callens, who retires after 32 years on the force, including five years as commanding officer in B.C.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Magnitude 4.9 Earthquake Strikes Northwestern Vancouver Island

    Magnitude 4.9 Earthquake Strikes Northwestern Vancouver Island
      The U.S. Geological Survey reports a magnitude 4.9 quake occurred at 4:28 (PT) Friday morning.

    Magnitude 4.9 Earthquake Strikes Northwestern Vancouver Island

    New Destination: Indian Students Flock To Australia For Higher Studies

    New Destination: Indian Students Flock To Australia For Higher Studies
    The numbers are likely to increase exponentially in the coming months as, according to some media reports, international students are beginning to shun the US because of the anti-immigrant policies of President Donald Trump

    New Destination: Indian Students Flock To Australia For Higher Studies

    Canada's Biggest Pulse Market In Doubt After India Rejects Extending Exemption

    CALGARY — Canada's top export market for its multi-billion-dollar pea and lentil crops industry is in doubt after India rejected extending a long-standing exemption on pest treatments.

    Canada's Biggest Pulse Market In Doubt After India Rejects Extending Exemption

    Mourner Who Chomped Man's Nose During Wake Gets 6 Months In Jail

    Mourner Who Chomped Man's Nose During Wake Gets 6 Months In Jail
    PICTOU, N.S. — A Nova Scotia man convicted of biting off part of a fellow mourner’s nose in a drunken brawl at a wake has been sentenced to six months in jail.

    Mourner Who Chomped Man's Nose During Wake Gets 6 Months In Jail

    Woman Forced To Remove Hijab By New York Police Department Cops, Files Case

      Rabab Musa, 34, alleged in the Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit that she was "unlawfully arrested" last September as she left a Starbucks in Midtown.

    Woman Forced To Remove Hijab By New York Police Department Cops, Files Case

    Jury Hears Chilling 911 Call Made From Scene Of Edmonton Warehouse Attack

    Jury Hears Chilling 911 Call Made From Scene Of Edmonton Warehouse Attack
    A chilling 911 call made by a panicked supervisor has been played in court at the trial of a man accused of murdering two co-workers and wounding others during an attack at an Edmonton grocery warehouse in 2014.

    Jury Hears Chilling 911 Call Made From Scene Of Edmonton Warehouse Attack