Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP charge fine options court coordinator on Saskatchewan reserve with fraud

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2014 10:29 AM

    BIG RIVER, Sask. — RCMP have charged a woman with more than 100 counts of fraud and forgery for allegedly running a court scam out of a reserve in northern Saskatchewan.

    Mounties say they began investigating the fine option co-ordinator in Big River First Nation in 2013, after receiving a complaint from the provincial court.

    Sgt. Lyle Korczak (CORE-zak) says officers interviewed many people who had been ordered to complete community service through the court's fine option program.

    He says there were pay-offs to get out of service work and false documents were filed with the court.

    Sylvia Grace Joseph faces 108 counts of forgery, fraud upon government, using a forged document and falsifying books and documents.

    Korczak says the woman was suspended from her job when the RCMP started its investigation.

    The 46-year-old is to appear in Big River provincial court Jan. 13.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Suspect In Terror-linked Attack Had Been Arrested In Summer: RCMP

    Suspect In Terror-linked Attack Had Been Arrested In Summer: RCMP
    MONTREAL - The man police say deliberately drove a car into two soldiers in a "despicable act" the government linked to terrorist ideology had been arrested by RCMP this summer as he was getting ready to leave the country, a spokeswoman for the federal police force said Tuesday.

    Suspect In Terror-linked Attack Had Been Arrested In Summer: RCMP

    B.C. Legislature Warned Of Security Concerns

    B.C. Legislature Warned Of Security Concerns
    VICTORIA - The clerk of British Columbia's legislature says some provincial politicians were warned this week about "heightened" security concerns in Ottawa in the days leading up to Wednesday's shootings on Parliament Hill and at the National War Memorial.

    B.C. Legislature Warned Of Security Concerns

    Legislatures Tighten Security After Ottawa Shooting

    Legislatures Tighten Security After Ottawa Shooting
    TORONTO - Security was beefed up Wednesday at government buildings across Canada following an attack on Parliament Hill, with at least one provincial legislature closing for the day and several others limiting public access.

    Legislatures Tighten Security After Ottawa Shooting

    $15 million Tax credit offered for Nova Scotia businesses

    $15 million Tax credit offered for Nova Scotia businesses
    HALIFAX - Businesses in Nova Scotia that spend more than $15 million in capital projects will be eligible for a tax credit in January to offset 15 per cent of their costs.

    $15 million Tax credit offered for Nova Scotia businesses

    Loopholes in Toronto's unlicensed daycare system: Ombudsman

    Loopholes in Toronto's unlicensed daycare system: Ombudsman
    TORONTO - Unlicensed daycares in Ontario operate under lax and barely enforced rules in a system with legal loopholes, the province's ombudsman has found in an investigation prompted by the death of a two-year-old girl.

    Loopholes in Toronto's unlicensed daycare system: Ombudsman

    Military bases on heightened security status after Ottawa shootings

    Military bases on heightened security status after Ottawa shootings
    OTTAWA - Canadian Forces bases across the country were told Wednesday to consider increasing security levels after shootings on Parliament Hill and at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.

    Military bases on heightened security status after Ottawa shootings