Thursday, February 18, 2016

CONFRONTING STATE TERROR! THE TORONTO POLICE, I BELIEVE, IS TRYING TO FRAME ME UP.

     ON A COLD NIGHT ON JANUARY 29, 2016, MY POWER IS SHUT OFF AGAIN, FOR THE 3RD TIME, THIS WEEK, BY TWO CRIMINAL LANDLORDS, ABUL BASHAR AND SHAMSUN BAMHAR.
THE TORONTO POLICE AND LOCAL GOVT. OFFICIALS ARE BEHIND IT, BECAUSE I HAVE EXPOSED THEIR CORRUPTION
.                                                                                


On my way home tonight, a car was parked on my street, on the "wrong side" of the street, opposite from where the other cars are parked, and with its headlights on. (IIt was parked two houses from where I live).This is a clear signal that it was either the police, or CSIS, harassing me. To prove my hunch, I took out my camera and begun to video tape the car, as I approached it. It suddenly drove off, as I focused my camera on it and I knew this was once again, another illegal surveillance and harassment, the Canadian government police and intelligence agents. I have gone through this scenario, dozens of times, over the years.

 

BREAK YOUR SILENCE! Victims of the crimes perpetrated by workers from the children aid societies!!



  “Truth is coming, and it cannot be stopped”                                                                                                                Edward Snowden                                                                                      
                       NAZIS AND THEIR CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY” (Break your silence)
We appeal to all mothers and fathers; whom they have been victims from the workers of the children’s aid societies, police and the judiciary. To bring into the court for the public opinion, the child trafficking for profit! The abduction of vulnerable children, separation and torture of children and parents by the society’s workers and the judiciary are causing every year the destruction of tens of thousands of families in this country.                                                                 
  
Crimes against children are the most heinous crimes. That, for me, would be a reason for capital punishment because children are innocent and need the guidance of an adult society.
Clint Eastwood
                                                                                                                                               

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

RESIDENTS OF GROUP HOMES: A BLOODY BUSINESS THAT NEVER ENDS?

Randy Risling / Toronto Star Order this photo
The Star discovered a disturbing tendency — particularly in group homes — to turn outbursts from kids usually suffering from trauma and mental health issues into matters for police
                                                                             
 
THE NAZIS AND THEIR CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
Justice for crimes against humanity must have no limitations!!!                                                                                       Simon Wiesenthal
                                                                               
Toronto group homes turning outbursts from kids into matters for police
Serious occurrences involving youth in the care of the Ontario government and privately run children’s aid societies often involve a call to police.
The Star discovered a disturbing tendency — particularly in group homes — to turn outbursts from kids usually suffering from trauma and mental health issues into matters for police.
Randy Risling / Toronto Star Order this photo
The Star discovered a disturbing tendency — particularly in group homes — to turn outbursts from kids usually suffering from trauma and mental health issues into matters for police.
By: Sandro Contenta News, Jim Rankin Feature reporter, Published on Fri Jul 03 2015
At Libby’s Place, an Etobicoke group home for troubled girls, a resident of more than a year was “desperate” to leave.
So she scratched two of the home’s cars, hoping the vandalism would get her thrown out and placed with foster parents. In a report on the incident to the Ontario government, staff from the home urged her legal guardians, the Children’s Aid Society of Toronto, to find the girl a “suitable program” as quickly as possible.
In the meantime, the girl’s cry of distress landed her in police custody with two counts of mischief.
Across town, at a Hanrahan Youth Services group home in Scarborough, a boy with a “developmental disability” smashed his bedroom window during a “disagreement” with another youth. Staff called police, and the boy — also in the care of the Toronto CAS — was taken into custody and charged with mischief.
Another youth at Hanrahan did no more than refuse an order to go to his room, according to the home’s report. He was charged with failing to comply with court conditions imposed for a previous incident.
The incidents are described in reports that must be filed to the Ontario government by group homes, foster parents and children’s aid societies when children or youth in their care are involved in events considered serious. In 2013, 1,199 separate incidents were filed in Toronto — all of them obtained by the Star through a freedom of information request.
The results show a disturbing tendency — particularly in group homes — to turn outbursts from kids usually suffering from trauma and mental health issues into matters for police.
They raise concerns about caregivers being too quick to call police, feeding what studies suggest is a pipeline that funnels youths in care into the justice system.
There are 3,300 young people in Ontario group homes.
The Star aggregated the Toronto data according to the types of serious incidents, a task the Ministry of Children and Youth Services, which receives the reports, has apparently never done.
Fully 39 per cent of the serious occurrence reports involved police. In a quarter of those incidents, youths ended up under arrest.
Child psychologist Dr. Michele Peterson-Badali, an authority on Canada’s youth justice system, believes caregivers are calling police for behaviours that most biological parents would deal with in more compassionate ways.
“These kids who are in foster or group homes are getting charged because they are living in a particular type of institutional environment where that’s the consequence for your behaviour,” says Peterson-Badali, a professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education.
“By virtue of where they are, they are far more likely to penetrate the justice system more deeply than they (otherwise) would,” she adds. “It’s like we’ve set them up. It’s very distressing.”
Ontario’s Provincial Advocate for Children and Youth, Irwin Elman, says the high rate of police involvement reflects “the culture of power and control” that reigns in many group homes.
Kim Snow, a professor at Ryerson University’s School of Child and Youth Care, believes it mirrors a lack of staff training in de-escalating situations in which youths act out.
“I can think of nothing worse than having a group home phone the police on their own children,” she says.
The link between youths in care and the criminal justice system has been studied in the U.S. but neglected in Canada. British Columbia is the exception.

"THE NAZIS AND THEIR CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY"

Shocking accusations arose today surrounding RCMP in Northern BC. They come from a report by Human Rights Watch, an international organization which focuses on human rights abuses. It urges our country to take a national look at missing and murdered aboriginal women cases.


Justice for crimes against humanity must have no limitations!!!                                                                                       Simon Wiesenthal

Carolyn Bennett Says There Are More Than 1,200 Missing Or Murdered Indigenous Women

Posted: Updated:
Print
OTTAWA — The number of missing and murdered indigenous women across the country is "way bigger'' than 1,200, Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett said Monday.
Her comments came as the government marked the end of a consultation process with the families of victims as it prepares to establish a public inquiry into these losses.
The real breadth and depth of the tragedy is greater than was thought, Bennett said at a downtown Ottawa hotel as families met behind closed doors.
"It is bigger than 1,200,'' she said. "Way bigger than 1,200.''
The minister's comments suggest that an RCMP report in 2014, which put the tally at 1,181 murdered and missing women between 1980 and 2012, did not paint a complete picture of the magnitude of the problem. The force added another 32 deaths and 11 disappearances in a 2015 update.
carolyn bennett missing women inquiry
Minister of Indigenous and Northern Affairs Carolyn Bennett speaks during a news conference on the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls inquiry in Ottawa on Monday. (Photo: Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)
Bennett, who has been travelling the country to talk to grieving loved ones, hopes the government will be able to develop the inquiry's mandate by summer.
A key step in this process will involve naming a commissioner or commissioners to lead the examination, which is intended to be arm's length from government once it is up and running.
The inquiry leadership will have to consider a number of questions, including whether cold cases need to be revisited, Bennett noted.
"That will be the job of the commissioners — to sort out what they feel they can do about these,'' she said.
"It is bigger than 1,200... Way bigger than 1,200.''
The process also needs to consider the survivors, she added.
"When we talk about families, we haven't been focused on the people who know it could have been them, it was almost them, people who ran away from the (Robert) Pickton farm, people who woke up after being strangled,'' she said.
The families have also indicated they still want to be involved once the inquiry has started, Bennett added.
Status of Women Minister Patty Hajdu said she is no stranger to tragic stories, having worked in Thunder Bay, Ont., where she ran a shelter for men, women and youth.
"Daily, I heard stories like this and witnessed personally, violence,'' she said.
She said the pre-inquiry process was also emotional.
"It is our shared responsibility to hear these stories as Canadians.''
"I think that if you are truly doing this job well, you need to be able to bear witness to that pain and you need to be able to empathize without losing yourself in the grief.
"It is a very delicate balance actually ... It is our shared responsibility to hear these stories as Canadians.''