Self Defence in Canada?

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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Regina, Saskatchewan
Very cool. When I was rock crushing, I would absolutely destroy cheap work boots in six months, and the expensive ones would last the better part of the year.

Out of the last half a dozen pairs, my favourites where actually made by Michelin, and they were awesome (!!) and I got a little over a year with them.
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I've had the same custom made pair for 38 years.

Wanna kiss my vamp?
I have no idea how long Daytons would’ve lasted me.
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But I was hard on work boots & can’t fathom 38 years on the same pair of boots.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
Very cool. When I was rock crushing, I would absolutely destroy cheap work boots in six months, and the expensive ones would last the better part of the year.

Out of the last half a dozen pairs, my favourites where actually made by Michelin, and they were awesome (!!) and I got a little over a year with them.
View attachment 30935
View attachment 30933

I have no idea how long Daytons would’ve lasted me.
View attachment 30934
But I was hard on work boots & can’t fathom 38 years on the same pair of boots.
Dayton bought out Pierre Paris who made killer workbooks. Another custom line offered by Dayton. 8 years before an issue with the sole. I sent them back for repairs saying "I broots not boots. They redid all the stitching and used bias-ply snow tires for soles. Two more years then gone when my truck was stolen.

Best work boots ever.

 
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Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
29,712
11,113
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
From what I heard a couple days ago, the guy who broke in, climbed up a fire escape, then broken into the suite through a window window, which turns out to be the window into this guy’s daughter’s room. The daughter wasn’t home, but the guy who came in was carrying a crossbow.

Some kind of confrontation occurred. The tenant had a knife vs the guy breaking in with his crossbow. Both ended up charged.
It was just a few hours after a man woke in the middle of an August night to find an alleged home invader with a crossbow in his apartment that police charged the resident with using a knife to defend himself.

The home invasion happened at 3:20 on the morning of Aug. 18, in Lindsay, Ont. At around 1 p.m, the Kawartha Lakes Police Service posted a news release announcing that the apartment resident had been charged with aggravated assault and assault with a weapon. (The alleged invader, too, was charged with various offences.)

Trust us, says the Kawartha police chief, there’s more to it, and the right to self-defence is not unlimited. True enough, but why rush to a decision to charge? How thorough can an investigation be in such a short time? How much time to assess, to reflect, to consider?

This is not just about one incident and one police service. A similar pattern has been found over and over again. And that’s despite a law developed by the Conservative government of Stephen Harper in 2012 that was supposed to make clear that reasonable acts of self-defence are permissible.

In at least four hair-raising cases, when the invaded turned the tables on the invader, they faced serious charges for doing so, only to have to prosecutors withdraw the charges.
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There is something seriously wrong here. The people who have faced armed intruders are being forced to confront yet another terrifying foe, the state, and to bear the stress of a possible jail sentence, and the expense of hiring a lawyer. It borders on the abusive when charges are laid and withdrawn again and again.

For nearly a century, Canadian courts have been defining and refining the doctrine of “proportionality:” You have the right to defend yourself, your loved ones and your property only up to the level of violence needed to repel the attacker, nothing more.

According to the RCMP, in those jurisdictions they patrol across the country, “the average response time” is just over 21 minutes. A little less reassuring — just over 15 per cent of high priority calls (911 calls) “are responded to in approximately five minutes.”

The numbers are similar for most major metropolitan police services.

The question them becomes, what are you supposed to do in those five to 20 minutes if there’s a lunatic loose in your home? Use your words? Explain you sympathize because of the rough childhood he may have had? Offer tea?
Now Pierre Poilievre and the Conservatives want to change the Criminal Code so the default presumption by police and Crown prosecutors has to be that when repelling an intruder a homeowner was justified in his or her actions. It should no longer be incumbent on the homeowner to establish he or she did only what was necessary, no more.
 

spaminator

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Oct 26, 2009
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Winnipeg thief sues grocer over beatdown, has feelings of 'anxiety'

Author of the article:Brad Hunter
Published Sep 09, 2025 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read

Dinos in Winnipeg
BEING SUED: Dino's in Winnipeg is being sued by a career criminal. Michael Prince said he suffers anxiety and cannot "work." FACEBOOK
Michael Prince is a criminal frequent flier who boasts he’s stolen more than $1 million in his illustrious career. Spectacular!


But in a caper earlier this year, things went off the rails.


And therein lies Prince’s tale of woe. Now, dear reader, you are not to burst out laughing as we detail the Prairie Prince of crime’s sad lot. He is now suing a small Winnipeg grocer. Justice will be his.

The 36-year-old Prince claims he was beaten by eight or nine employees of Dino’s Food Mart after he was nabbed trying to steal a car from the parking lot last year. It was just awful!

In Winnipeg’s desperate downtown core, businesses have been abandoning the zone in droves. Dino’s is one of the last retail businesses standing. Others, like 7-Eleven, have thrown in the towel over theft, junkies and homelessness. Accountants got out the calculators and quickly determined that downtown Winnipeg isn’t worth it.


Enter the Prince.

On Aug. 12, he filed a statement of claim in Winnipeg court naming Dino’s Food Mart owner Rajan Varma and eight John and Jane Does whom he alleges “kicked, punched and hit him with a hammer” in the store parking lot. Prince admits he was pinched stealing a jacket containing a wallet and key fob from inside the store, Global News reports.

The rogue royal says in his statement of claim that after he stole the coat, he went to his nearby home until the heat died off. Thirty minutes later, Prince returned to steal the vehicle, but it was boxed in.

Still, he didn’t earn his pride of place in the criminal fraternity without determination. Using the key fob to enter the vehicle, Prince clearly didn’t believe things would go south, but suddenly, the car alarm “alerted Dino’s personnel.”



He says they set upon him, pulled him out of the car, and beat him. Prince went wee wee wee all the way home, and his concerned brother called 911. Winnipeg cops charged Prince with theft while skipping charges against Dino’s staff.

Prince claims he now suffers from a multitude of horrors since the Feb. 26, 2024 incident. These include “constant fear, anxiety, apprehensiveness, depression and feelings of worthlessness.”

And now, the Prince can no longer work. Which is kind of funny given his chosen occupation is thievery. He is seeking unspecified damages.


According to Global News, the Prince is no babe in the woods and has an extensive criminal history. In an unrelated pre-sentence report last summer, Prince boasted that he was the “Capo dei capi” of his low-rent theft ring that stole more than $1 million in property in 10 years.

Prince et. al. would then move the stolen property in the dark corners of bars and bingo halls. He said the money from his criminal endeavours funded his drug habit.

Of course, Prince’s payday gambit is ludicrous. But this being Canada, it’s 50/50 the career criminal might be able to find that special judge who thinks — sorry, it’s all about feelings, who feels — that Prince has been done wrong.

They are out there. We know they are ready to do the faculty lounge’s bidding.

bhunter@postmedia.com

@HunterTOSun
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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He says they set upon him, pulled him out of the car, and beat him. Prince went wee wee wee all the way home, and his concerned brother called 911. Winnipeg cops charged Prince with theft while skipping charges against Dino’s staff.
The Kay-beckers are confused. They want to know why he was saying "yes yes yes."