Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Warn Public About High-risk Sex Offender Living In Vancouver

Darpan News Desk, 31 Aug, 2016 12:56 PM
    The Vancouver Police Department believes that compelling circumstances exist to warn the public about a high-risk sexual offender who is now residing in Vancouver.
     
    Forty-five-year-old Michael Wayne Carpenter is currently serving a 10 year long term supervision order with convictions for three counts each of sexual assault with a weapon, forcible confinement, and utter threat to cause death or bodily harm.
     
    Michael CarpenterCarpenter poses a risk of significant harm to the safety of vulnerable female children, youth and adults and will be residing at a correctional halfway house in the City of Vancouver.
     
    He is described as white, 5’9” tall, weighs 180 lbs. with brown short hair and blue eyes.
     
     
    Michael Carpenter will be bound by the terms of a long term supervision order, which includes the following conditions:
     
    Not to consume, purchase, or possess alcohol.
     
    Not to consume, purchase or possess drugs.
     
    Not to own, use or possess a computer, or any technological device that would allow access to the internet.
     
    Not to be in the presence of any female children under the age of 18, except in certain conditions.
     
    Not to purchase, acquire, possess or access pornography or sexually explicit material.
     
    Report all friendships, sexual relationships and intimate relationships with women.
     
    No contact with certain persons.
     
    No go Kamloops, BC.
     
    Not to enter any private dwelling or places including, but not limited to hotels, motels, rooming houses, SRO residences, private residence/dwelling, or vehicles.
     
    Reside at a specific place.
     
    Curfew and police reporting conditions.
     
    Anyone witnessing Michael Wayne Carpenter in violation of any of these conditions is asked to call 9-1-1.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Councillors OK hefty pay hike for themselves for Fort McMurray recovery work

    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — Councillors from a northeastern Alberta municipality severely damaged by a huge forest fire have voted themselves a hefty raise.

    Councillors OK hefty pay hike for themselves for Fort McMurray recovery work

    Stem Cell Scientist Suspected Of Involuntary Manslaughter

    Stem Cell Scientist Suspected Of Involuntary Manslaughter
    STOCKHOLM — A disgraced stem cell scientist is facing preliminary charges of involuntary manslaughter in connection with two patients who died after windpipe transplants, Swedish prosecutors said Wednesday.

    Stem Cell Scientist Suspected Of Involuntary Manslaughter

    Northern Ont. First Nation Under Boil Water Advisory Gets Water Treatment Plant

    Northern Ont. First Nation Under Boil Water Advisory Gets Water Treatment Plant
    The federal government provided $5.8 million toward the design and construction of the new water treatment plant for Constance Lake First Nation near Hearst.

    Northern Ont. First Nation Under Boil Water Advisory Gets Water Treatment Plant

    Blackberry Meets With Shareholders At Annual Meeting, 1 Day Before Earnings Release

    WATERLOO, Ont. — BlackBerry is holding its annual general meeting in Waterloo, Ont., this morning, with top executives likely to face questions on the future of its hardware business.

    Blackberry Meets With Shareholders At Annual Meeting, 1 Day Before Earnings Release

    Religious Leaders In Saskatchewan Concerned About Assisted Dying Policies

    Religious Leaders In Saskatchewan Concerned About Assisted Dying Policies
    Christian, Muslim and Jewish leaders met with Health Minister Dustin Duncan at the Saskatchewan legislature Tuesday and said facilities should not be forced to help people end their lives either.

    Religious Leaders In Saskatchewan Concerned About Assisted Dying Policies

    Housing Advocates To Ask Ottawa To Rethink How Country Counts, Tracks Homeless

    OTTAWA — The federal government is going to be asked today to trade its so-called "point-in-time" counts of the country's homeless in favour of real-time lists of people who are homeless or living in poverty.

    Housing Advocates To Ask Ottawa To Rethink How Country Counts, Tracks Homeless