Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Man, 3 Foreign Nationals Arrested In Attempted Smuggling Into Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2016 10:47 AM
  • Ontario Man, 3 Foreign Nationals Arrested In Attempted Smuggling Into Canada
CORNWALL, Ont. — A Cornwall, Ont., man and three foreign nationals have been arrested in what border officials say was an attempt to smuggle people from the United States into Canada.
 
The Canada Border Services Agency says it got information from its U.S. counterparts on Feb. 11 that three foreign nationals were identified in Massena, N.Y., as acting in "a suspicious manner."
 
The CBSA says it conducted surveillance on the three people with the help of its partners.
 
It says the Akwesasne Mohawk Police Service were then able to intercept and arrest the trio as well as a resident of Cornwall on Cornwall Island, which sits in the Saint Lawrence River on the Canadian side of the border.
 
The CBSA says the Cornwall man was arrested for aiding and abetting the illegal movement of people into Canada under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
 
 
The three foreign nationals were arrested for entering Canada without examination. The CBSA did not disclose their nationalities or further details about them.
 
The CBSA says the foreigners had detention reviews and admissibility hearings on Feb. 15 and 16, and are being held in custody until they can be deported.
 
The Cornwall man was released on a promise to appear in court March 15.
 
CBSA spokesman Chris Kealey said the case was a good example of how law enforcement agencies can work well together.
 
Kealey said he didn't know why the three foreign nationals were trying to enter Canada, but he noted people try to move undetected across both sides of the border.
 
In a similar case last September, a group of foreign nationals attempted to cross into Ontario from the U.S. in the same area aboard a See-Doo, Kealey said.
 
 
"There were too many people on that device and it tipped over and two people drowned as a result," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast

Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast
An analysis by one of Canada's biggest banks says the federal government is on track to run $150 billion in budgetary deficits over the next five years.

Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast

Justin Trudeau Hits The Slopes At Whistler Over Weekend, Praises Guards' Ski Skills

Justin Trudeau Hits The Slopes At Whistler Over Weekend, Praises Guards' Ski Skills
The prime minister took some time out of running the country over the weekend to shred some powder with his family in Whistler, B.C.

Justin Trudeau Hits The Slopes At Whistler Over Weekend, Praises Guards' Ski Skills

Halifax Spoofed For Asking Dog Owners To Keep Pets Quiet In Off-Leash Park

Halifax Spoofed For Asking Dog Owners To Keep Pets Quiet In Off-Leash Park
The municipality recently erected a sign at the off-leash area of Shubie Park asking pet owners to "control your dog's barking" or take them elsewhere.

Halifax Spoofed For Asking Dog Owners To Keep Pets Quiet In Off-Leash Park

Overcrowding Blamed As Females To Be Held At Men's Penitentiary In Newfoundland

Overcrowding Blamed As Females To Be Held At Men's Penitentiary In Newfoundland
  Justice Minister Andrew Parsons says it's a temporary move to deal with a "sharp increase" of inmates at the province's only correctional centre for women in Clarenville.

Overcrowding Blamed As Females To Be Held At Men's Penitentiary In Newfoundland

Letter To Justin Trudeau, Premiers: Scientists Tell Politicians To Rethink Pipelines

Letter To Justin Trudeau, Premiers: Scientists Tell Politicians To Rethink Pipelines
In an open letter to the politicians, members of Sustainable Canada Dialogues question pumping billions into new pipelines and other oil and gas projects.

Letter To Justin Trudeau, Premiers: Scientists Tell Politicians To Rethink Pipelines

B.C. Says Great Bear Rainforest Act Enshrines Co-existence In Global Treasure

B.C. Says Great Bear Rainforest Act Enshrines Co-existence In Global Treasure
Forests Minister Steve Thomson says often-opposing groups in B.C. can now co-exist as they share and preserve the riches of a global treasure, located about 700 kilometres north of Vancouver.

B.C. Says Great Bear Rainforest Act Enshrines Co-existence In Global Treasure

PrevNext