Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police To Crack Down On Mafia After Man's Slaying In Crowded Quebec Hotel

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2019 07:49 PM

    MONTREAL — A Quebec police force is cracking down on organized crime after this month's brazen organized crime-linked slaying inside a popular hotel.


    Laval police say they, along with Quebec provincial police and the RCMP, will be stepping up presence at establishments known to be frequented by organized crime groups on their territory.


    Pierre Brochet, Laval's police chief, says the May 5 slaying of Salvatore Scoppa, which took place with hundreds of people present and with a blatant disregard for their safety, harkens back to Quebec's biker gang wars in the 1990s.


    Scoppa, 49, a man with links to organized crime, was declared dead in hospital. Remarkably, no one else was injured in the attack.


    Brochet says "Projet Repercussion" is in response to that event, which he called unacceptable.


    Scoppa's was one of two fatal shootings in crowded public places in the span of a week.


    On Friday night, a 25-year-old man was killed in a restaurant in busy shopping district in Brossard, Que., just south of Montreal.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Wildlife Advocate Questions Decision To Kill Pigeons Pooping On Saskatoon Bridge

    SASKATOON — Crews tasked with cleaning a Saskatchewan bridge are in for a dirty job.

    Wildlife Advocate Questions Decision To Kill Pigeons Pooping On Saskatoon Bridge

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman
    WINNIPEG — The family of an Indigenous woman whose death prosecutors described as worse than any horror movie says there is finally justice now that her killer has been found guilty.    

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman

    U.S., European Diplomats Support Canada In Chinese Court In Death-Penalty Appeal

    The show of solidarity did not diminish Canadian worries over the fate of Robert Schellenberg of British Columbia.

    U.S., European Diplomats Support Canada In Chinese Court In Death-Penalty Appeal

    Refugee Changes Will Hurt Women Asylum Seekers, Women's Organizations Say

    Refugee Changes Will Hurt Women Asylum Seekers, Women's Organizations Say
    Last year, the United States said it wouldn't accept asylum claims based on fleeing domestic violence.

    Refugee Changes Will Hurt Women Asylum Seekers, Women's Organizations Say

    'Smart Drugs' Features Experiment Among Those Fuelled By Need To Succeed

     Toronto filmmaker Ann Shin was so intrigued by an animator's tales about doing some of his best work with the help of "smart drugs" that she wanted to learn how they would work if someone tried them as part of a months-long experiment.

    'Smart Drugs' Features Experiment Among Those Fuelled By Need To Succeed

    Low B.C. Snowpacks Reduce Flood Risk, Hike Chance Of Summer Droughts

    VANCOUVER — Snowpacks across British Columbia are below normal this year, reducing the likelihood of flooding but raising the spectre of dry conditions this summer.

    Low B.C. Snowpacks Reduce Flood Risk, Hike Chance Of Summer Droughts