Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jury deliberations begin in trial of human smuggling, frozen migrant family

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Nov, 2024 10:55 AM
  • Jury deliberations begin in trial of human smuggling, frozen migrant family

Jurors began deliberations Friday in the trial of two men accused of human smuggling across the Canada-U.S. border between Manitoba and Minnesota.

They are tasked with deciding whether to convict or acquit Steve Shand and Harshkumar Patel on four charges.

The prosecution says the two men were part of a smuggling ring that saw Indian nationals brought to Canada then made to walk across the border into the U.S.

During one trip on Jan. 19, 2022, a family of four from India froze to death while walking across a remote stretch of the border in a blizzard.

The bodies of Jagdish Patel, 39; his wife, Vaishaliben Patel, 37; their 11-year-old daughter, Vihangi; and their three-year-old son, Dharmik, were found in a field in Manitoba just metres from the border. They were not related to the accused.

Shand's lawyer has said Shand simply picked up people and transported them within the U.S. and was unaware he was doing anything illegal.

Harshkumar Patel's lawyer has argued the prosecution misidentified Patel and he's not the same man whose text messages about organizing border crossings were caught by law enforcement.

The trial, which started Monday, heard testimony from investigators, who said Patel paid Shand and the two kept in contact during several smuggling missions.

Some text messages discussed the frigid weather in December of 2021 and January 2022, and others talked about trying to find people who became lost at or near the border.

The trial also heard from one migrant who survived the same crossing with the family who died.

Yash Patel, who is also not related to the accused man with the same last name or those who died, said he was driven in a van with several others to an area in Manitoba near the border.

It was dark and windy, and the driver told everyone to get out and walk in a straight line until they came across a van on the U.S. side, Patel said.

He testified that he walked with the group for about 10 minutes before becoming separated in blinding snow. Five or six hours later, he said, he found the van in the U.S, which was stuck in snow. He got in to warm up.

He was soon taken into custody by border patrol agents, along with the driver — Shand — and another passenger.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada and U.S. list Samidoun as terrorist group, U.S. adds Canadian to terror list

Canada and U.S. list Samidoun as terrorist group, U.S. adds Canadian to terror list
Canada is listing the pro-Palestinian group Samidoun as a terrorist group, while the U.S. has added a Canadian citizen affiliated with the organization to its counter-terrorism list. Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc says Samidoun will now be listed under Criminal Code offences that ban people from donating or providing property to the group.

Canada and U.S. list Samidoun as terrorist group, U.S. adds Canadian to terror list

Why India and Canada are in an escalating rift, with each expelling diplomats

Why India and Canada are in an escalating rift, with each expelling diplomats
Ottawa's decision to expel India's top envoy and five other diplomats have given rise to greater tensions that have simmered for months between the two countries with Sikh groups calling for Indian consulates to be shut down in Vancouver and Toronto. 

Why India and Canada are in an escalating rift, with each expelling diplomats

Carbon pricing rebates land in bank accounts as Liberals defend embattled policy

Carbon pricing rebates land in bank accounts as Liberals defend embattled policy
Canadians are set to receive carbon pricing rebates Tuesday, as the Liberals defend one of their most embattled policies. The government says this is the first time all banks will label the payment as the Canada Carbon Rebate, after years of inconsistent and vague phrasing on bank statements.

Carbon pricing rebates land in bank accounts as Liberals defend embattled policy

B.C. Conservatives expected to release costs of promises days before election

B.C. Conservatives expected to release costs of promises days before election
It's the last week of the British Columbia election campaign after a busy long weekend of promises for the B.C. Conservatives, including a new Children's Hospital for Surrey. B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad is expected to explain how he's going to pay for all his promises, from the so-called Rustad rebate to exempt up to $3,000 a month of rent or mortgage payments from taxes, to the plan to eliminate the carbon tax. 

B.C. Conservatives expected to release costs of promises days before election

Canada spat leads India newspapers as trade minister works to reassure business

Canada spat leads India newspapers as trade minister works to reassure business
On Monday, the RCMP warned the public about a rash of crimes including murder, extortion and coercion that the force links to Indian government agents. The allegations sparked diplomatic retaliation; after Canada declared six Indian diplomats persona non grata, India ordered six Canadian envoys out of the country by Saturday.

Canada spat leads India newspapers as trade minister works to reassure business

Annual inflation falls to 1.6% in September, raises odds of 50-basis-point rate cut

Annual inflation falls to 1.6% in September, raises odds of 50-basis-point rate cut
The inflation report is the last major piece of economic data before the Bank of Canada’s interest rate decision on Oct. 23 when it will also update its economic forecasts in its monetary policy report.

Annual inflation falls to 1.6% in September, raises odds of 50-basis-point rate cut