Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Police To Get New Tools To Search For Missing People

The Canadian Press, 02 Nov, 2017 11:52 AM
    TORONTO — Police in Ontario are on track to being given more tools when searching for missing people, such as the ability to track cellphones and enter homes in connection with the cases.
     
    Those are steps they are currently limited in taking unless there is evidence a crime has been committed.
     
    The new Missing Persons Act is part of sweeping changes to policing laws that Ontario introduced today.
     
    Community Safety and Correctional Services Minister Marie-France Lalonde says the new act would allow police to respond more quickly and effectively when people go missing, including elderly citizens.
     
    The proposed new powers were recommended as part of an inquest into the deaths of seven Indigenous youth in Thunder Bay, Ont.
     
    Lawyer Julian Falconer, who represented the Nishnawbe Aski Nation at the inquest, says the new rules will bring needed clarity for police around what they can do in missing persons cases.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    City Holds Public Hearing To Regulate Short-term Vacation Rentals In Vancouver

    VANCOUVER — Many proponents of the home sharing platform Airbnb called on Vancouver to loosen terms of proposed regulations on the industry, but renters advocates and condominium boards say tight rules are exactly what is needed.

    City Holds Public Hearing To Regulate Short-term Vacation Rentals In Vancouver

    28-Year-Old Nicholas KHABRA Identified As Victim Of Targeted Surrey Shooting

    28-Year-Old Nicholas KHABRA Identified As Victim Of Targeted Surrey Shooting
    Nicholas Khabra was one of two people injured in the incident that occurred shortly after 2 a.m. Monday in the 14300 block of Crescent Road.

    28-Year-Old Nicholas KHABRA Identified As Victim Of Targeted Surrey Shooting

    Extensive Search For Mushroom Picker Ends After Nine Days In Northern B.C.

    Extensive Search For Mushroom Picker Ends After Nine Days In Northern B.C.
    SMITHERS, B.C. — The official search for a woman in northwestern British Columbia has been called off.

    Extensive Search For Mushroom Picker Ends After Nine Days In Northern B.C.

    Retail Jobs Put At Risk By Self-Service Technology, Experts Say

    Retailers are racing to adopt new technologies, like the self-scanner Walmart has rolled out in 22 Canadian stores, to stay competitive in a challenging industry. 

    Retail Jobs Put At Risk By Self-Service Technology, Experts Say

    Judge Praises Sex-Assault Victim, Sentences Woman's Former Supervisor

    Judge Praises Sex-Assault Victim, Sentences Woman's Former Supervisor
    HALIFAX — He was her supervisor and sexually abused her for months — repeatedly groping her and making sexual comments, all under the guise of joking around.

    Judge Praises Sex-Assault Victim, Sentences Woman's Former Supervisor

    Fire That Ravaged A $14M Shaughnessy Home May Have Been Set Deliberately

    Fire That Ravaged A $14M Shaughnessy Home May Have Been Set Deliberately
    October 22, 2017 just before 2:30 a.m. officers from the VPD and the Vancouver Fire and Rescue Service responded to a house fire near Angus Drive and Matthews Avenue in Vancouver. 

    Fire That Ravaged A $14M Shaughnessy Home May Have Been Set Deliberately