Friday, April 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec man charged with advocating genocide

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jul, 2020 08:46 PM
  • Quebec man charged with advocating genocide

A Quebec man charged last December in connection with alleged online threats against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Muslims is facing two new charges.

The RCMP said 62-year-old Andre Audet of Boucherville, Que., will appear in court south of Montreal today to face charges of intimidating a justice system participant and advocating genocide.

Cpl. Charles Poirier says the justice system participant Audet is accused of intimidating is the prime minister.

The RCMP says the investigation that began last year found about 100 online posts containing hate, threats or incitement to violence, allegedly made under various pseudonyms, against Muslims and the prime minister.

Audet was originally charged in December with incitement of hatred and wilful promotion of hatred.

Police say a full analysis of the evidence since then led them to add the two new charges, adding it's the first time someone in Quebec has been charged with advocating genocide following an RCMP investigation.

MORE National ARTICLES

MacKay's campaign says no deal was cut to woo deputy party leader's endorsement

MacKay's campaign says no deal was cut to woo deputy party leader's endorsement
Peter MacKay's Conservative leadership campaign said Monday the party's deputy leader wasn't promised a similarly high-profile position in the House of Commons in exchange for supporting MacKay for the top job.

MacKay's campaign says no deal was cut to woo deputy party leader's endorsement

Sentries return to National War Memorial

Sentries return to National War Memorial
Military sentries are returning to their spots in front of the National War Memorial and Tomb of the Unknown Soldier as the threat posed by COVID-19 appears to be receding.

Sentries return to National War Memorial

StatCan probes pandemic hit to inflation

StatCan probes pandemic hit to inflation
Statistics Canada says Canadians' buying patterns changed so much during the COVID-19 pandemic that its measure of consumer inflation went a little wobbly.

StatCan probes pandemic hit to inflation

Police say Abbotsford, B.C., homicide targeted

Police say Abbotsford, B.C., homicide targeted
Investigators say a shooting that killed a 43-year-old man east of Vancouver on Friday night was likely targeted.

Police say Abbotsford, B.C., homicide targeted

PM: wage subsidy to be extended to December

PM: wage subsidy to be extended to December
The federal government is extending its program to subsidize wages in companies hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic until December, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday.

PM: wage subsidy to be extended to December

8 positive tests: Four sites in Kelowna, B.C., now linked to COVID-19 exposures

8 positive tests: Four sites in Kelowna, B.C., now linked to COVID-19 exposures
Health officials are monitoring several cases of COVID-19 exposure in Kelowna, B.C., and say they've identified two more locations where people may have contracted the respiratory illness.

8 positive tests: Four sites in Kelowna, B.C., now linked to COVID-19 exposures