Regina News
Riders could target linemen early in CFL Draft, analysts say
A pair of CFL Draft analysts believe the Saskatchewan Roughriders will stick to their identity when it comes to their pick.
Saskatchewan will select ninth overall in the first round after the team claimed the Grey Cup with a win over the Montreal Alouettes in Winnipeg.
Read more:
- Michaela Kleisinger back as U of R Cougars head coach
- Tigers roar back against Prince Albert Raiders in Game 2
- Regina Pat Canadians lose in semifinals at Telus Cup ending repeat hopes
Categories: Regina News
LISTEN: Former Regina mayor backs proposal to revive city’s REAL District
A former mayor of Regina is giving a clear nod of approval to a potential sale of some facilities at the city’s REAL District.
Michael Fougere spent 23 years on Regina City Council, including five terms as a councillor in Ward 4 and two terms as mayor. During an appearance on The Greg Morgan Morning Show on Monday, Fougere said he likes the offer the city is considering, which would see several buildings at the REAL District sold to the Brandt Group.
Read more:
- Regina’s REAL District sale plan draws support, calls for caution
- City of Regina plans partial sale of REAL District to Brandt, promises cost savings
- Uncertainty around REAL makes booking live events challenging: CEO
Categories: Regina News
What’s in the Brandt-REAL deal? Breaking down the agreement
A 24-page non-binding agreement will be the basis for final discussions between the City of Regina and Brandt Properties on a sale agreement for a large portion of the REAL District.
The “term sheet”, as it is called, is to be considered a “working draft for discussion purposes only,” according to the documents filed for Wednesday’s Executive Committee meeting.
Read more:
- Regina’s REAL District sale plan draws support, calls for caution
- Brandt CEO shares vision for new distillery, entertainment complex at REAL District
Categories: Regina News
Canada mulls observer role in fighter jet program with Italy, U.K., Japan: McGuinty
OTTAWA — Defence Minister David McGuinty confirms Canada is looking into getting involved in a program run by a coalition of countries to develop a sixth-generation fighter jet.
But McGuinty says Canada has not yet made a final decision on whether to obtain observer status in the Global Combat Air Programme, run by Japan, the United Kingdom and Italy.
The Global Combat Air Programme grew out of Britain’s Tempest program, which was launched to design a replacement for the Eurofighter Typhoon.
McGuinty made the comments today in French when questioned by members of a Senate committee.
The minister says Ottawa is still reviewing a plan to purchase 88 F-35 fighter jets from U.S.-based Lockheed Martin after committing funds to buy 16 of the aircraft, but adds that the option of buying jets from other countries is still on the table.
The Liberal government has been reviewing the purchase for more than a year now as U.S. President Donald Trump has pursued his ongoing trade war with Canada.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
Former corrections officer accused of trafficking drugs into Regina jail is headed toward trial
Former corrections officer Justin Amyotte, who was accused of trafficking drugs into the Regina jail, appears to be headed toward a trial based on submissions made by his lawyer Monday. Read More
Categories: Regina News, Saskatchewan News
Lawyer for ex-Mountie accused of security offence says Crown hasn’t proven case
VANCOUVER — The defence counsel for William Majcher, a former Mountie accused of preparing to coerce a Canadian resident for the benefit of the Chinese government, says the case against him is "purely circumstantial," and hasn't proved Majcher was referring to his alleged target in an email that was a central piece of evidence.
Ian Donaldson says there's no usable evidence showing his client "ever knew anything" about the man.
Donaldson told Majcher's British Columbia Supreme Court trial that the email at the centre of the Crown's case does not name the person Majcher described as a "crook" he hoped to convince to agree to a settlement with Chinese authorities.
He says it would be "unsafe" to infer the subject of Majcher's 2017 email was Kevin Sun, a Vancouver-area real estate mogul the Crown has accused Majcher of preparing to extort as a "proxy" for Chinese authorities.
Majcher pleaded not guilty to one charge under Canada's Security of Information Act as his judge-alone trial got underway in Vancouver on April 20.
Crown prosecutor Ryan Carrier previously told the trial that Chinese authorities turned to Majcher — who was operating an asset recovery business based in Hong Kong — after the RCMP decided to stop assisting in the pursuit of Sun, and the former Mountie's alleged actions were an "affront" to Canadian sovereignty.
But Donaldson told Monday's hearing the Crown's "purely circumstantial" case against Majcher failed to prove that he was referring to Sun and that he had a settled intention to commit the alleged offence at the time he wrote the email.
If a fraudster were living in Canada on the proceeds of crime, it would be in the public interest to pursue that person, Donaldson added.
Majcher's defence counsel elected last week not to call any evidence at the trial.
The trial has heard Sun was accused of defrauding a Chinese state bank and absconding to Canada with about $120 million in the early 2000s.
It has also heard Majcher's email to a colleague in June 2017 related to an effort to recover proceeds from a fraud matching the details of Sun's alleged crime.
Prosecutor Ryan Carrier previously quoted Majcher as writing in the email that he hoped to "impress upon the crook that we hold the keys to his future."
An earlier court ruling indicates Majcher added "the Chinese want to use this as a precedent case to settle economic crimes quietly and expeditiously."
The April 1 ruling also includes an email in which Majcher apparently wrote that if the "target" co-operated, he hoped to settle the matter within a few weeks. "If he fights then (there) will be extradition request and lengthier process but we feel he is motivated to co-operate as we can guarantee him his passport and no jail time."
Only Chinese authorities would be in a position to make promises that Sun would receive a passport and avoid jail time if he co-operated, Carrier said Friday.
He said Majcher is charged under the section of Canada's security legislation that deals with preparing to commit an offence under the same law, including actions for the benefit of or in association with a foreign entity or terrorist group.
Majcher's intended message for Sun was the Chinese government "is coming for you," Carrier said, adding a "veiled" reference may amount to extortion.
With Majcher's help, he said Chinese police were able to "project" their power beyond China's borders into Canada, constituting unauthorized foreign interference.
Donaldson said Monday the Crown's evidence came down to a few sentences in an email that was otherwise lawful. "It would be wrong in principle to extract a sentence or two, construe those in the most negative possible fashion, in order to conclude that that was the only reasonable inference, that these were steps preparatory, specifically directed toward carrying out a coercive-based offence."
He said prosecutors hadn't proven Majcher intended to act unlawfully, and to find him guilty the court would have to conclude that "mental element" was present.
Donaldson told Devlin she could not look at Majcher's statement that he hoped to "impress upon the crook that we hold the keys to his future" and come to the conclusion the remark reached the standard for criminal coercion.
Before the trial, the court found Majcher's arrest at Vancouver's airport in 2023 occurred without reasonable or probable grounds, breaching his Charter rights.
The court had also ruled that a warrant authorizing a search of another former Mountie's home as part of the investigation into Majcher was invalid.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
Brenna Owen, The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
He would have fought, family says of Saskatoon homicide victim
Wray Musqua’s sister says she didn’t expect her brother to be killed “so violently” as police piece together Saskatoon’s sixth homicide case of the year.
Saskatoon police said officers on patrol received a call around 10:55 p.m. on Friday about an injured person in the 2200 block of 22nd Street in the Mount Royal neighbourhood.
Officers said they found a 55-year-old man who was unresponsive and was taken to the hospital, where he died the following day.
Bonnie Musqua said police told her that her brother was involved in an altercation where he was stabbed and injured. He then went across the street to the McDonald’s where he collapsed.
“He was stabbed in the heart,” Bonnie said.
The investigation is ongoing and Bonnie said the family doesn’t have the exact details surrounding the killing, but she said she knows how her brother would have reacted during that altercation.
“He would have fought for his life, basically, and that’s what he did.”
Bonnie said Musqua went straight into surgery, was in a coma and on lung support, but ultimately his body started to fail after losing too much blood.
“We were all praying when he took his last breath,” she said. “It was sad, but it was comforting to know that he went in prayer.”
Musqua was ‘larger than life,’ loving father to 15 children
Musqua, from Keeseekoose First Nation, was the second youngest of 11 siblings. Bonnie said he grew up in a traditional lifestyle with loving parents.
“When Wray was growing up, he was always so big, larger than life,” Bonnie said. “He was always so energetic, ever since he was a kid.”
“My dad used to say he could be a lawyer,” she said.
Diane Musqua said her little brother comes from a family of educators, teachers, social workers and a long line of chiefs.
“There were even hopes and dreams that maybe he would come home and be a leader,” she said. “That’s how intelligent he was.’
Musqua’s sisters said he was involved in traditional ceremonies, was protective over his loved ones and was a loving father to 15 children.
Bonnie said when Musqua was 14 he decided he was ready to go out and experience the real world.
“He was extremely smart and that’s probably why he survived out here in Saskatoon.”
Bonnie said her brother was drawn into a street lifestyle at a young age, and while he would return home, it became a struggle at times to keep him there.
His sisters noted he wasn’t always involved in the street lifestyle and said he was a hard worker and laborer, as well as a boxer.
“He’d get up in the morning and he’d go find a job,” Bonnie said.
“The people that he was around sometimes (had a) negative influence with gangs and stuff like that.”
Diane said because of this, her brother had been in and out of the jail system, noting “it’s a different lifestyle where you can’t just break free from it.”
“He was always loved, and we were always there for him,” Diane said. “We knew that this kind of situation or this kind of thing would take him, but it is still so traumatic for us.”
Diane said she hopes and desires that this type of street lifestyle ends with her brother’s story.
“It’s never too late to change your lifestyle, there’s always opportunity for you to change,” Diane said, noting there are resources available for addictions and trauma.
“Life is precious and our people can’t continue to go down and destroy each other,” Diane said.
“We want people to learn that he came from a loved family and we want our people to get healthy.”
So far no charges have been laid in connection to Musqua’s death but Saskatoon Police said the Major Crime Section is investigating and further details would be provided when available.
Saskatoon homicides in 2026
The first homicide investigation of 2026 was a 25-year-old man with stab wounds who died at St Paul’s Hospital on Feb. 3. An 18-year-old man was charged with manslaughter and aggravated assault on Feb. 7. His charges were later downgraded on Feb. 27 to being an accessory after the fact to manslaughter, accessory after the fact to aggravated assault, public mischief and obstruction of justice.
The second homicide case of the year began when a man died after a shooting in the 900 block of 22nd Street West in the Pleasant Hill neighbourhood on March 14. A 17-year-old boy was then charged on March 17 with second-degree murder, using a firearm while committing an indictable offence and possessing a firearm while prohibited.
The city’s third homicide investigation of 2026 began after a 61-year-old woman died in a Riversdale house fire in the 400 block of Avenue I South on April 3. No arrests have been made.
The fourth homicide investigation of the year wasn an investigation into the death of a 39-year-old man in hospital after he was found unresponsive on Avenue X South just before 4 a.m. on April 6. Police have made no arrests.
The fifth homicide investigation of the year began as a suspicious death investigation after a person died on Avenue W North on April 15. Police said the victim, who has not been identified publicly, died at the scene despite first aid attempts by paramedics.
Saskatoon had eight homicide investigations in 2025.
Categories: Regina News
Canada is getting a sovereign wealth fund. What does that mean and how do they work?
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the creation of the country's first-ever sovereign wealth fund on Monday, called the Canada Strong Fund.
Carney pitched the new fund as a way for Canadians to invest in nation-building projects in areas that include energy, infrastructure, mining, agriculture and technology.
Here's what you need to know about sovereign wealth funds and how they operate.
What is a sovereign wealth fund?
A sovereign wealth fund is a state-owned investment vehicle. The standard objective is to invest wisely in assets, such as stocks, bonds and real estate, and earn a good rate of return to grow the fund and bolster public finances.
The idea has been around for a long time, although these funds really took off in the 1990s. There are now more than 100 sovereign wealth funds in the world that hold upward of $10 trillion in assets, according to The International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds.
Some countries have several, and just last year President Donald Trump ordered the creation of a federal U.S.-owned fund.
Paul Calluzzo, an associate professor at the Smith School of Business, said sovereign wealth funds often operate a lot like households using excess cash to invest.
"The idea is that if you invest responsibly as well, you can have a lot more money down the line than if you just spent it today," he said. "You can also spread out that windfall over time, so that future generations can also benefit."
But Calluzzo said the Canadian government's objective is to make the economy more resilient.
"Creating more resilience might be investing not internationally, but domestically, in a way that makes the Canadian industry more self-sufficient and more independent," he said.
Norway's sovereign wealth fund has grown into the world's largest, valued at roughly $2 trillion. It took revenue from North Sea oil production and invested it outside the country in financial assets such as bonds and equity stakes.
Some sovereign wealth funds also have secondary goals beyond generating returns.
Persian Gulf states use their sovereign funds to diversify outside of the fossil fuel industry, insulating them from economic developments such as oil price swings. Norway's fund supports its national pension system.
What do they typically invest in?
Jordan Eizenga, who leads Deloitte Canada’s infrastructure and real estate practice, said which sectors a sovereign wealth fund will invest in depends on the state's overall goals and strategy.
"You could invest in renewable power, you could invest in parts of the defence supply chain, you could invest in aviation — you can invest in anything that the country or the board deems to be in its strategic interest," he said.
Canada's new fund will be managed by a Crown corporation that will invest in "strategic" domestic projects — in areas such as advanced manufacturing, energy and mining — along with companies, according to a government background document.
Ottawa will consult Canadians over the coming months on specific aspects of the fund, Carney said on Monday, adding that the overall goal will be to "grow wealth for Canadians over the long term."
Calluzzo said sovereign wealth funds often invest in many of the same companies as individuals.
"Norway has a small stake in almost every publicly traded company in the world. So, really spreading it out into public financial markets, but they're not limited to public markets," Calluzzo said.
"They can also invest in private markets through things like private equity or private credit or through direct infrastructure investments, which is more similar to what the Canadian fund looks like it's aiming to do."
How are they funded?
Capital for sovereign wealth funds is often drawn from dedicated revenue streams, such as natural resource wealth. They can also be supported by surpluses from foreign exchanges.
Carney said the federal government will put up an initial $25 billion in public funds over three years to invest in domestic projects, alongside private investors.
The prime minister said individual Canadians can invest in the fund, suggesting it would be similar to purchasing a government bond, where the initial investment is protected.
How does this fund differ from funds like CPP Investments or Caisse?
Calluzzo said there are some key differences to investment vehicles such as the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board and Quebec's public pension fund manager, the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec.
The CPP and La Caisse are pensions with defined benefits and contractual obligations to pay their beneficiaries.
The new Canadian sovereign wealth fund also has a specific mandate to invest in domestic projects. But CPP and La Caisse have fiduciary responsibilities that push them to diversify globally.
Eizenga said it is best to think of a sovereign wealth fund as having two goals: one to seek returns, and the other being economic development.
The CPP has a goal of obtaining the best risk-adjusted return for pensioners, while La Caisse has a mandate involving the development of the Quebec economy.
"The way a sovereign wealth fund would differ from CPPIB is it would have additional goals," Eizenga said.
"Those goals could be about enhancing the productive capacity of Canada, developing specific industries, ensuring sovereignty, maybe driving key industries that would make us more secure for the future."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
Daniel Johnson and Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
After review, University of Regina hires Michaela Kleisinger as fulltime basketball coach
Michaela Kleisinger — and the University of Regina — went through a tumultuous week before she was hired as fulltime coach for the women's basketball team on Monday. Read More
Categories: Regina News, Saskatchewan News
Data centre protest graffiti sprayed across RM of Sherwood building
Regina Police Service is investigating after graffiti was found on the windows and walls of the RM of Sherwood administrative building on Monday.
Phrases like “F— AI LETS RIOT” and “HEAR US” was spray painted in black at the building in Regina’s Harbour Landing neighbourhood.
Read more:
- Landowners push for safeguards around proposed data centre near Regina
- What is a data centre? Expert explains amid Regina debate
Categories: Regina News
B.C. Supreme Court hearings begin for legal challenges to LNG pipeline project
VANCOUVER — The B.C. Supreme Court is set to weigh in on two legal challenges filed over the provincial government's decision to allow a liquefied natural gas pipeline project to go ahead on a 12-year-old environmental review.
Two petitions take aim at the Prince Rupert Gas Transmission pipeline after the government deemed the project "substantially started," meaning it wouldn't need a new environmental assessment.
The pipeline's construction was authorized in 2014, and a deadline to start it was extended to 2024, spurring the court challenges from Gitxsan Hereditary Chief Charlie Wright and environmentalist groups opposed to the project.
Wright says in legal submissions that the challenge isn't about opposing the pipeline itself, but rather the route it's expected to take through "one of the last remaining untouched areas" of his home territory without proper consultation.
Environmental opponents to the pipeline, the Kispiox Valley Community Centre Association, the Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition and a local resident claim the project has not been substantially started.
Shannon Lea McPhail with the Skeena coalition says in a statement that the project stalled for a decade and the work to satisfy the substantial start condition was "last minute," alleging the province appeared willing to "bend over backwards … to keep this zombie project alive."
The cases are scheduled to be heard together for six days in B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026
The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
Michaela Kleisinger back as U of R Cougars head coach
Michaela Kleisinger will be back with the University of Regina Cougars women’s basketball team.
The U of R started a review last week of the hiring process after social media comments said the team had elected to move on from Kleisinger, who was the interim head coach.
Read more:
On Monday, a statement from Dr. Jeff Keshen, the university’s president and vice-chancellor, provided an update on the review.
“The University of Regina has determined that certain important factors, including the interim coach’s demonstrated performance and the strong competitive record under her leadership, as well as her deep connection to the institution and the broader community, were not given the necessary weight and merit,” the statement read.
“In light of these considerations, an offer has been made and accepted by Michaela Kleisinger to lead the Cougars women’s basketball team as head coach. This decision reflects the University’s commitment to excellence in sport, inclusive leadership, and the future of Cougars women’s basketball.”
Kleisinger is a former player who spent five years as a member of the U of R Cougars women’s basketball team. During that time, she averaged 13 points, 7.2 rebounds, and six assists per game. She joined the coaching staff for the 2022-23 season under the team’s long-time head coach Dave Taylor.
Taylor left the U of R to become the head coach of the University of British Columbia Thunderbirds last season, and Kleisinger was named the interim head coach of the Cougars.
Under Kleisinger, the team overcame the chaos of the off-season and held a 17-3 conference record, with the team ranked among the best in Canada at times.
Kleisinger was named the coach of the year at the team’s varsity sports awards ceremony.
CJME News has reached out to Kleisinger for comment.
Read more:
Categories: Regina News
Saskatchewan’s Moe supportive of sovereign wealth fund, calls for easing regulations
REGINA — Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe is calling Ottawa's new sovereign wealth fund a good initiative.
But Moe says if Prime Minister Mark Carney really wants to unlock investments in major projects, then the government should walk back a number of environmental policies he says are getting in the way.
Carney says the fund will be used to invest in major Canadian industrial projects across a variety of sectors and that it would receive a $25 billion endowment to start.
The prime minister says he expects the fund to support projects that come with national benefits, but Moe says ditching Ottawa's impact assessment process and signing a new agreement on industrial carbon pricing would go a lot further in boosting the economy.
The premier also says his province has discussed creating its own sovereign wealth fund, but a string of recent deficits has stopped the idea from getting off the ground.
Moe says it's a concern that Carney will need to work through as well, considering Ottawa is projecting deficits of more than $50 billion for the next five years.
"I think that would generally be a concern of Canadians. However, the broader thought of having a sovereign wealth fund, I think, is a good discussion to have," Moe told reporters in Regina Monday.
"If it's going to truly be effective and be able to apply dollars into it that are not coming from being loaned from a bank or an institution, you're only going to do that through the growth of your economy."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
Carney’s trade advisory group meets for 1st time, welcomes new member
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney's new advisory council on Canada—U.S. trade met for the first time today, ahead of trade negotiations with President Donald Trump's White House that are set to begin over the coming months.
Carney recently struck the new committee in preparation for the scheduled review of the Canada-United States-Mexico agreement on trade, better known as CUSMA, which must start by July.
Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc chaired the closed-door meeting of the council's roughly two dozen members, which include leading Canadian business and labour leaders.
LeBlanc's office says the committee reviewed Canada's priorities for CUSMA renewal talks but did not say what those priorities are.
The trade advisory group includes former Conservative party leader Erin O'Toole and former premiers Jean Charest and P.J. Akeeagok.
The advisory panel also welcomed a new member today: Eliot Pence, the founder of the Canadian defence tech firm Dominion Dynamics.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
Denare Beach woman who lost home in 2025 wildfire frustrated with preparations for upcoming season
Images of last year’s wildfires and the destruction they caused are still burned into the minds of many residents of northern Saskatchewan. And as another wildfire season looms, some are worried history will repeat itself.
Jordan McPhail, the Saskatchewan NDP MLA for Cumberland, said Saskatchewan’s fleet of water bombers is not ready as the wildfire season approaches. On Friday, McPhail told reporters that two water bombers in Saskatchewan are “not going to be ready until mid-July or later,” with “another one that’s not showing up until August,” and a fourth “totally unaccounted for.”
Read more:
- Public Safety Agency says several communities seeing spring flooding
- Saskatchewan ombudsman says government slow in responding to wildfire evacuees
- How Canadians can prepare for wildfire evacuations, from emergency plans to go bags
Categories: Regina News
New Brunswick premier shuffling senior provincial staff
FREDERICTON — New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt says she's shuffling around several provincial senior staff as of May 1.
Deputy Finance Minister Travis Bergin becomes deputy minister responsible for government reform and modernization on Friday.
Bergin will be part of the Executive Council Office working on ways to cut costs amid financial challenges facing the province.
Amy Beswarick will take over Bergin's previous role at finance on an interim basis, adding it to her current deputy minister gig at the human resources department.
Jim Mehan will become deputy minister of post-secondary education, training and labour, while Daniel Mills will take over Mehan's old gig as deputy minister of social development.
Cabinet Secretary Judy Wagner will transition to a new role as senior advisor to the head of the public service ahead of a retirement.
Wagner has spent more than three decades working at the New Brunswick government, according to her LinkedIn profile.
"We extend our sincere thanks to Judy for her many years of dedicated public service and her outstanding leadership in key roles," Holt said Monday.
"Her insight, commitment and steady guidance have made a lasting impact, and she will be missed."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
Eli Ridder, The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
Quebec premier meets U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer in Washington D.C.
WASHINGTON — Quebec's premier met today in Washington D.C. with U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, an influential member of President Donald Trump’s cabinet.
Christine Fréchette met Greer ahead of negotiations between Canada, the U.S. and Mexico on the continental free-trade pact, scheduled to begin July 1.
Fréchette's office did not release details yet from the meeting with Greer, a former U.S. air force lawyer who was chief of staff to Trump’s first-term trade representative, Robert Lighthizer.
She is in Washington on her first official foreign trip since she was sworn in as premier earlier this month.
Earlier in the day she held a roundtable discussion with representatives of business associations including the National Lumber and Building Material Dealers Association and General Motors.
The United States is Quebec’s main trading partner, but since March 2025 U.S. tariffs have hit several of the province's industrial sectors hard.
In 2024, nearly three-quarters of Quebec’s exports (73.5 per cent) were destined for the U.S. market, valued at $91.2 billion. These consisted mainly of aircraft, aluminum, aircraft engines, and mining products such as gold, silver, platinum group metals, and their alloys.
Greer's official website says he “has made it a priority to put America First on trade by combating unfair foreign trade practices, expanding market access for Made in America products, and ensuring the United States has balance and reciprocity in its trading relationships.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
-- With files from The Associated Press
The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
B.C. says new regulations effective this fall will curb extortion-related violence
VICTORIA — Provincial gun regulations that have been nine years in the making will come into effect in British Columbia this fall, shutting down what the province call loopholes in federal laws that have helped allow extortion crimes to proliferate.
The new regulations include a ban on firing from vehicles, which has been a feature of a wave of extortions involving shooters firing from cars at homes and businesses, then posting videos of the attacks online.
Public Safety Minister Nina Krieger says the new regulations resulting from the Firearm Violence Prevention Act will help police crack down on such offences.
The new regulations also make it an offence to operate a vehicle illegally transporting a firearm and requiring that imitation and low-velocity firearms, such as pellet guns, are securely stored when being transported.
While the government drafted the legislation before the recent rise of extortion-related shootings, Krieger says the regulations are all about closing "loopholes that are exploited by organized (criminals) and specifically by extortionists causing harm in our communities."
The act, which was originally passed in 2021 and comes into force on Oct. 1, was developed out of a 2017 task force report into illegal firearms.
Krieger says it "took really extensive consultations" over the past five years to strike the right balance with "uninterrupted, safe access" for law-abiding gun owners and criminals.
Attorney General Niki Sharma says extortionists have been testing the "limits of accountability" in several ways, including using rental cars or cars owned by family and friends to transport firearms.
When police discover firearms, Sharma says, individuals often "claim that they didn't know that they were there, or that the firearms belonged to somebody else."
She says such loopholes create "real challenges for prosecution under existing criminal laws, adding the new regulations will remove common defences used by organized criminals and help disrupt their mobility.
"Police rely primarily on the Criminal Code and the federal Firearms Act," Sharma says. "But they come with high evidentiary thresholds, and do not always allow for swift intervention at the street level."
Sharma says the new rules fill these gaps by creating provincial offences, while the act "provides a clear mechanism for police to confiscate and destroy firearms used to commit an offence."
The regulations also prohibit the sale of low-velocity and imitation firearms to anyone under 18.
Krieger says that list includes BB, pellet and airsoft guns, lighters designed to look like firearms, and other objects that could reasonably be mistaken to be firearms.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press
Categories: Regina News
Canadian manufacturers call for tariffs on global imports of wood products
Canadian wood manufacturers are welcoming a trade inquiry into wood imports but say the investigation needs to be followed by immediate provisional tariffs on foreign-made goods entering the country.
Earlier this month, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said the government had directed the Canadian International Trade Tribunal to launch an inquiry into global imports of wood cabinets and vanities, hardwood flooring and storage furniture.
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He said the tribunal would have 270 days to decide if increased imports of the products are causing or threatening to cause serious injury to Canadian wood product manufacturers, and to make recommendations to the government on next steps.
The Canadian Wood Products Alliance says it appreciates the government’s “swift recognition” of the situation but says it won’t be enough to provide the stability and relief the industry needs unless it’s followed by tariffs.
It says there are tens of thousands of Canadians who depend on the industry.
The alliance says there have been job losses and business closures already, and more will follow if tariffs aren’t implemented immediately.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 27, 2026.
Categories: Regina News
Man charged with attempted assassination of Trump in White House correspondents’ dinner shooting
WASHINGTON (AP) — The man who authorities say tried to storm the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner with guns and knives was charged Monday with the attempted assassination of President Donald Trump and will remain at least temporarily behind bars as the case moves forward.
Cole Tomas Allen appeared in court Monday to face federal charges in a chaotic encounter that resulted in shots being fired, Trump being rushed off the stage and guests ducking for cover underneath their tables. He was taken into custody after the shooting on Saturday night and sat beside his lawyers in a brief appearance Monday in Washington’s federal court.
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Besides being charged with attempting to assassinate the Republican president, Allen also faces two firearms charges. He did not enter a plea.
A judge granted a prosecutor’s request Monday to keep Allen, 31, of Torrance, California, detained pending additional hearings. One of Allen’s lawyers, Tezira Abe, asked for a detention hearing and noted Allen has no criminal record.
“He also is presumed innocent at this time,” she said.
The Associated Press called multiple phone numbers listed for Allen and relatives in public records, and there was no answer when a reporter knocked on the door of his home.
Prosecutors have not revealed a motive, but in a message reviewed by the AP that authorities say was sent by Allen to family members minutes before the attack, Allen referred to himself as a “Friendly Federal Assassin,” made repeated references to the Republican president without naming him and alluded to grievances over a range of Trump administration actions.
Investigators are treating the writings, along with a trail of social media posts and interviews with family members, as some of the clearest evidence of the suspect’s mindset and possible motives.
Allen is believed to have traveled by train from California to Chicago and then onto Washington, where he checked himself in as a guest at the hotel where the gala dinner was held with its typically tight security, acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said.
“It does appear that he did in fact set out to target folks who work in the administration, likely including the president,” Blanche told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday.
Video posted by Trump shows a man, who authorities say was armed with guns and knives, running past a security barricade as Secret Service agents run toward him. Authorities say an officer wearing a bullet-resistant vest was shot in the vest but is expected to recover.
Records show Allen is a highly educated tutor and amateur video game developer. A social media profile for a man with the same name and a photo that appears to match that of the suspect show he worked part-time for the last six years at a company that offers admissions counseling and test preparation services to aspiring college students.
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