Black Lives Matter-Ugliness of Racism.

spaminator

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Injured Smiths Falls hockey player settles long-running Hockey Canada lawsuit
Now 26, he suffered a crushed vertebra in his cervical spine when he was checked headfirst into the boards during a World Junior A Challenge game on Dec. 14, 2014.

Author of the article:Andrew Duffy
Published Jun 08, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 2 minute read

A Smiths Falls hockey player who suffered a devastating spinal injury while representing his country at an international tournament has settled his seven-year-old lawsuit against Hockey Canada.


Neil Doef, now 26, suffered a crushed vertebra in his cervical spine when he was checked headfirst into the boards during a World Junior A Challenge game against Switzerland on Dec. 14, 2014.


He sued Hockey Canada and its insurer, AIG, for $6.5 million.

Doef alleged Hockey Canada breached its duty of care: its legal obligation to take reasonable steps to protect him from foreseeable harm.

In a joint prepared statement released this week, Doef and Hockey Canada said they had reached an “amicable resolution” to their long-running legal dispute.

The financial terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

Doef expressed relief at finally reaching a deal. “Hockey remains, and will continue to be, one of the most important aspects of my life,” he said. “I am eager to continue my journey in the hockey world and to make the contributions that I can to the game and hockey community.”


Hockey Canada, the national governing body for the sport in this country, said it wanted to publicly recognize Doef’s courage.

“He played Canada’s national sport with talent and passion and has demonstrated tremendous resilience and determination during his rehabilitation, in no small part because of his strength of character,” Hockey Canada said in the statement.

Doef was 17, an aspiring National Hockey League prospect, and the leading scorer for the Central Canada Hockey League’s Smiths Falls Bears when he was injured during the game in Kindersley, Sask. He was stretchered off the ice, unable to feel his arms or legs, and underwent emergency surgery. Doctors were initially guarded about his ability to walk again.


But Doef dedicated himself to recovery at The Ottawa Hospital Rehabilitation Centre and by the summer of 2015 was able to able to walk short distances with the help of a walking pole and an electronic muscle stimulator.

Doef went on to graduate with an economics degree from Princeton University, where he had previously been recruited to play collegiate hockey. The Ivy League school honoured its admission and financial aid offers after Doef’s spinal-cord injury ended his hockey career.


In his lawsuit, Doef said Hockey Canada failed to obtain appropriate insurance coverage to pay for the heavy costs associated with a spinal cord injury. Its AIG policy included $1 million of coverage for an insured person suffering total paralysis of both lower limbs.


Documents filed as part of the lawsuit showed AIG rejected Doef’s $1-million claim on November 2015 on the basis that he was not paralyzed. The insurer said he did not meet the definition of a paraplegic with “the permanent paralysis and functional loss of use of both lower limbs.”

AIG said its medical review indicated Doef had normal strength in his right leg, hip, knee and ankle. It offered Doef a $30,000 settlement for the loss of use of his left leg and other benefits for occupational training, home and vehicle modifications, physiotherapy and counselling.
 

spaminator

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Socialite Jasmine Hartin released from jail after bogus allegations

Author of the article:Brad Hunter
Published Jun 08, 2023 • Last updated 2 days ago • 2 minute read

Whoops!

Cops in Belize have now sprung Canadian socialite Jasmine Hartin after admitting she hadn’t broken any laws as she attempted to cross into Mexico.


Hartin, 34, pleaded guilty to manslaughter by negligence in the May 2021 shooting death of her friend, local police chief Henry Jemmott.

The mother-of-two, originally from the Kingston, Ont. area, avoided jail and was instead ordered to pay a fine.


After Hartin paid the $37,000 fine via her lawyer, Belizean officials declared there were “discrepancies.” Of course, Hartin has been engaged in a bitter custody battle with her former common-law husband, Andrew Ashcroft.

He is the son of the richest man in Belize, Michael Ashcroft, a Tory member of the House of Lords in London.

Even after paying her fine, a court official refused to return Hartin’s Canadian passport. As a result, the embassy had to issue emergency travel documents so she could cross into Mexico.


But Belize border guards instead jailed Hartin in a sweaty cell where she was forced to strip to her underwear to keep cool.

One day later, local officials admitted they had made a mistake. Belize Police Commissioner Chester Williams — who previously claimed the petite blond was plotting to kill him — blamed “discrepancies” in her payment.

“Having conducted the investigation, looking at the court order and the statements recorded, there in insufficient evidence to prosecute Hartin for any offence, especially since the entire fine has been paid,” Williams told local reporters.


“While there were some discrepancies with the declaration, it was clear she was acting on the advice of her attorney who she had all reason to believe.”


At the Mexican border, sources close to Hartin said she was accused of falsifying her travel documents. Hartin’s lawyers offered up for the media the legitimate documents issued by Canada.

On Wednesday, her lawyer Orson “OJ” Elrington slammed the Belize government for stopping Hartin from leaving the country.

“The travel restrictions had been removed from the time she was sentenced. She had no travel restrictions except for the fact that the registrar and the court would have had her passport,” Elrington told Channel 5.

“Now, a passport does not mean you cannot travel. Instructions are normally very clear on the order that you cannot leave the country. She did not have her passport and my understanding is that she got a temporary permit from the Canadian government because she had some emergency matters she had to deal with.”


He said so far attempts to get answers from Belize police and immigration officials have been fruitless.

“So right now it seems to me that the government of Belize will have a lawsuit on its hands. There was no payment delay really and truly,” the lawyer said.

“If you have millions of dollars invested in Belize, would you leave Belize because they are saying you have 300 hours of community service? Would you not return because you don’t want to give community service? The weight simply does not match up.”

bhunter@postmedia.com

@HunterTOSun
 

spaminator

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White Florida woman claims Black neighbour she shot and killed threatened her first
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Curt Anderson
Published Jun 08, 2023 • Last updated 2 days ago • 3 minute read

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A white Florida woman accused of shooting and killing her Black neighbour told investigators she had been threatened by the victim in the months before the slaying, according an arrest report released Thursday that detailed allegations of racist threats and physical threats to the victim’s young children.


The report from the Marion County Sheriff’s Office came out shortly before Susan Louise Lorincz made her initial appearance in court Thursday by video on manslaughter and other charges.


Lorincz appeared wearing a dark protective vest, answered the judge’s questions about her finances but did not enter a plea. A public defender was appointed to represent her at an upcoming bond hearing.

In a statement to investigators after the shooting of Ajike Owens, a 35-year-old Black mother of four, Lorincz was quoted as saying she had problems for two years with children in the neighbourhood not respecting her — including the victim’s children, who range in age from 3 to 12 years old.


“Lorincz advised that the children of (Owens) have told her in the past they would kill her,” the report says.


The day of the shooting, Lorincz told investigators she had a headache and that “neighbours were outside screaming and yelling, kids were running around” in a grassy area separating two apartment quadruplex buildings, including hers. She said Owens angrily confronted her and threatened to kill her.

According to the sheriff’s timeline, Lorincz called the department at 8:54 p.m. the night of the shooting to say kids were threatening her and trespassing. She had previously placed “no trespassing” signs in the grassy areas, despite it not being a part of her rental. Lorincz said in court she owns no property at all.

While deputies were on their way, more calls came in to 911 about shots heard in the same area. At 9:04 p.m., one of Owens’ children called 911 to say his mother had been shot, according to the timeline. Lorincz also called again, saying she had shot a woman through her door. Deputies arrived about three minutes later to find Owens lying on the ground. She was pronounced dead at a hospital a half hour later.


Lorincz claimed “that Owens banged on the door so hard everything started shaking and she thought the door was going to come off,” and that she panicked and said to herself “‘Oh my god she’s really going to kill me this time.”’ That’s when she fired a single round from her .380-calibre handgun, the report says, noting that Lorincz also had a second handgun in the home.

“Lorincz advised that she purchased the firearm for protection after an altercation with the victim,” it says.

Lorincz, 58 is charged with manslaughter with a firearm, culpable negligence, battery and two counts of assault Sheriff Billy Woods said in a statement.

During a news conference Wednesday afternoon, the victim’s family, friends and community leaders joined civil rights attorney Ben Crump in thanking the sheriff for making the arrest, while calling for justice for Owens.


“This is not a difficult case,” Crump said. He called on the state attorney’s office to “zealously prosecute” the shooter.

Crump, along with Owens’s mother and multiple neighbours noted during the news conference that the “feud” the sheriff spoke of was between Lorincz and neighbourhood children. Neighbours said Lorincz frequently called the children vile names when they played in the grassy area outside her home.

One child told deputies that the night of the shooting, Lorincz “came out of her house and gave the children the middle finger” and also said this: “Get away from my house, you Black slave,” according to the report.

Authorities had delayed her arrest for several days while looking into a possible “ stand your ground ” claim.

The sheriff has said that since January 2021, deputies responded to at least a half-dozen complaints between Owens and Lorincz.

Owens’ mother, Pamela Dias, has said she will now raise her four young grandchildren. The funeral for Owens is set for Monday in Ocala.

— Associated Press writer Freida Frisaro contributed from Fort Lauderdale.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
Mr Again should ask the Danish cop if theyd help a Roma find insulin.

Blind in one eye, cant see through the other.

Roma: what discrimination do they face and what does EU do?

Society Updated: 12-10-2022 - 16:05
Created: 21-09-2020 - 14:09

What discrimination do Roma people face?​


Romani people are one of Europe’s largest ethnic minorities with some six million living in the EU. They face difficulties such as limited access to quality education and difficulty integrating into the labour market, leading to further poverty and social exclusion, lack of quality healthcare and poor living conditions.


Roma inclusion: what MEPs propose​


In a resolution adopted on 5 October, MEPs demanded equal access to education, employment, healthcare and housing for Roma people living in settlements in the EU. They called on EU countries to include Roma children in their national plans to fight social exclusion for children living at the risk of poverty. EU countries should also work to eradicate practices of segregation and carry out anti-discrimination campaigns in schools.

The report encourages a strategy to take into account the diversity of the community and to provide Romani people equal participation in public policy.


Parliament said that Roma people should have access to decent housing and urged the European Commission to establish an early warning mechanism to identify the misuse of EU funds earmarked for addressing the current problems. It also called on the Council to conclude negotiations on the anti-discrimination directive, blocked since 2008.


MEPs also warned that 10-20% of the estimated 400,000 Roma people living in Ukraine are stateless or at risk of statelessness and demanded the protection of Roma refugees against unlawful expulsions and discrimination when applying for temporary protection.


Education and employment

For many Roma people, exclusion and discrimination starts at a young age. According to the Roma Integration Strategies report 2019, 68% of Roma left school early. In addition, only 18% of Roma children transit to higher levels of education and 63% of young Roma are not in education, employment or training, compared to an EU average of 12%. In addition, only 43% of Roma are in a form of paid employment.


Poverty

Many of the Roma people live in marginal and very poor socio-economic conditions and face discrimination, social exclusion and segregation According to the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, 80% continue to live below the poverty line.


Hate-motivated harassment​


Nearly half of Roma and Travellers respondents (44%) experienced hate-motivated harassment in the 12 months preceding the survey. More recently, Roma have been blamed for spreading the coronavirus in Eastern European countries.

Etc.....

 
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pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
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B.C.
Mr Again should ask the Danish cop if theyd help a Roma find insulin.

Blind in one eye, cant see through the other.

Roma: what discrimination do they face and what does EU do?

Society Updated: 12-10-2022 - 16:05
Created: 21-09-2020 - 14:09

What discrimination do Roma people face?​


Romani people are one of Europe’s largest ethnic minorities with some six million living in the EU. They face difficulties such as limited access to quality education and difficulty integrating into the labour market, leading to further poverty and social exclusion, lack of quality healthcare and poor living conditions.


Roma inclusion: what MEPs propose​


In a resolution adopted on 5 October, MEPs demanded equal access to education, employment, healthcare and housing for Roma people living in settlements in the EU. They called on EU countries to include Roma children in their national plans to fight social exclusion for children living at the risk of poverty. EU countries should also work to eradicate practices of segregation and carry out anti-discrimination campaigns in schools.

The report encourages a strategy to take into account the diversity of the community and to provide Romani people equal participation in public policy.


Parliament said that Roma people should have access to decent housing and urged the European Commission to establish an early warning mechanism to identify the misuse of EU funds earmarked for addressing the current problems. It also called on the Council to conclude negotiations on the anti-discrimination directive, blocked since 2008.


MEPs also warned that 10-20% of the estimated 400,000 Roma people living in Ukraine are stateless or at risk of statelessness and demanded the protection of Roma refugees against unlawful expulsions and discrimination when applying for temporary protection.


Education and employment​

For many Roma people, exclusion and discrimination starts at a young age. According to the Roma Integration Strategies report 2019, 68% of Roma left school early. In addition, only 18% of Roma children transit to higher levels of education and 63% of young Roma are not in education, employment or training, compared to an EU average of 12%. In addition, only 43% of Roma are in a form of paid employment.


Poverty​

Many of the Roma people live in marginal and very poor socio-economic conditions and face discrimination, social exclusion and segregation According to the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, 80% continue to live below the poverty line.


Hate-motivated harassment​


Nearly half of Roma and Travellers respondents (44%) experienced hate-motivated harassment in the 12 months preceding the survey. More recently, Roma have been blamed for spreading the coronavirus in Eastern European countries.

Etc.....

They still don’t count .
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
Of course they would. Just not as big a difference as many think.
The outcome would be similar to Residential School pay outs in Canada. For some it was a death sentence, for most it was a temporary boost with little long term impact. It was life changing for very few who invested or started a business. All in all it didnt make up for a damn thing.
 
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