CBC News Brunswick
Grab your raincoat as heavy rain, high winds hit, but brace for 'whiplash''
Unseasonably high temperatures and wet weather are plaguing much of the province Monday, with heavy rain, high winds and warmer than usual weather in store. ...More ...

Unseasonably high temperatures and wet weather are plaguing much of the province Monday, with heavy rain, high winds and warmer than usual weather in store.
11 Dec 2023 14:13:25
CBC News Brunswick
Acceptance revoked for many international students after NBCC deadline change
A deadline change for international students to submit immigration documents to NBCC after they were accepted led to the college cancelling many students' acceptance. ...More ...

A deadline change for international students to submit immigration documents to NBCC after they were accepted led to the college cancelling many students' acceptance.
11 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
Controversial federal clean fuel charges in New Brunswick barely noticed in most provinces
The cost to consumers of new federal government clean fuel regulations has been a central point of attack on Ottawa by the New Brunswick government for months but a new report suggests there might hav ...More ...

The cost to consumers of new federal government clean fuel regulations has been a central point of attack on Ottawa by the New Brunswick government for months but a new report suggests there might have been no effect at all if New Brunswick had higher environmental standards for itself and had adopted bio-diesel and ethanol rules on its own like most other provinces.
11 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
The Hypochondriacs Announce Live Album Recording
Fredericton’s favourite live band, The Hypochondriacs, have set aside two nights in January for a live recording and they are inviting friends and fans to be a part of it.… The post The Hypoch ...More ...
Fredericton’s favourite live band, The Hypochondriacs, have set aside two nights in January for a live recording and they are inviting friends and fans to be a part of it.…
The post The Hypochondriacs Announce Live Album Recording appeared first on Grid City Magazine.
11 Dec 2023 01:15:40
CBC News Brunswick
Book Launch with Poet Laureate Jordan Tretheway
Fredericton poet laureate Jordan Tretheway will host a poetry reading and book launch on January 25 at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery. Over the past year, Fredericton’s poet laureate Jordan Tretheway ...More ...
Fredericton poet laureate Jordan Tretheway will host a poetry reading and book launch on January 25 at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery. Over the past year, Fredericton’s poet laureate Jordan Tretheway…
The post Book Launch with Poet Laureate Jordan Tretheway appeared first on Grid City Magazine.
11 Dec 2023 01:15:18
CBC News Brunswick
Charlotte Street Arts Centre Launches Membership Program
CSAC’s renewed membership drive offers a number of perks associated with the Centre’s diverse programming. The Charlotte Street Arts Centre has announced the return of its annual me ...More ...
CSAC’s renewed membership drive offers a number of perks associated with the Centre’s diverse programming. The Charlotte Street Arts Centre has announced the return of its annual membership program,…
The post Charlotte Street Arts Centre Launches Membership Program appeared first on Grid City Magazine.
11 Dec 2023 01:13:06
CBC News Brunswick
Hate speech, vandalism hit Black resource centre at Mount Allison
A group representing Black students at Mount Allison Univeristy is calling for more transparency and consultation after the university’s Black Resource and Information Centre was the target of vanda ...More ...

A group representing Black students at Mount Allison Univeristy is calling for more transparency and consultation after the university’s Black Resource and Information Centre was the target of vandalism and hate speech.
10 Dec 2023 19:27:39
River Valley Sun
Craft markets offer unique and heartfelt gift options
Scenes from markets on first weekend of December Christmas shoppers seeking unique and heartfelt gift options can find what they want while supporting Upper St. John River Valley craftspeople, arti ...More ...
Scenes from markets on first weekend of December
Christmas shoppers seeking unique and heartfelt gift options can find what they want while supporting Upper St. John River Valley craftspeople, artisans and artists at the many crafts fairs during the holiday season.
The first weekend of December saw a pair of vendor markets showcasing a wide selection of handmade creations.
On Friday and Saturday, Dec. 1 and 2, Wotstak (Woodstock) First Nation hosted its annual Christmas Bazaar, while vendors gathered at the Woodstock Royal Canadian Legion Branch 11 on Sunday, Dec. 3, for the Holly Jolly Craft Market.
Craft artist Sandy Carrier of Belleville offered Sandy’s Creations, including unique Christmas decorations, at both events.
She said both vendors and shoppers enjoy craft markets.
Carrier added the Upper St. John River Valley benefits from the many talented craft artists in the area.
Beyond the business aspect of local craft markets, they provide an excellent atmosphere for socializing and sharing the Christmas spirit.
Area residents took advantage of several craft fairs throughout December, including two next door to each other in downtown Woodstock on Saturday, Dec. 9.
The Elks Club hosted a market with “lots of vendors” on Saturday.
Next door, the Creek Village Gallery and Café provided a chance to meet its many amazing artists and artisans and buy their creations at the galley’s Mini Craft Fair.
Creek Village will host an additional Mini Craft Fair on Saturday, Dec. 16.
The Woodstock Farm and Craft Market on King Street in downtown Woodstock has provided farm products, baked goods, and arts and crafts for the past half-century. It is open six days a week from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.








The post Craft markets offer unique and heartfelt gift options first appeared on River Valley Sun.
10 Dec 2023 17:16:47
CBC News Brunswick
Wet, warm and windy weather in cards for New Brunswick
After dealing with snow and cold last week, New Brunswick is set for the exact opposite over the next 24 hours. ...More ...

After dealing with snow and cold last week, New Brunswick is set for the exact opposite over the next 24 hours.
10 Dec 2023 14:31:11
Fredericton Independent
Heavy rainfall expected Monday in N.B.
Subscribe nowThe federal weather service has issued a heavy rainfall alert for Monday for most of New Brunswick, and that includes Fredericton and surrounding communities.In an update posted at 4:42 a ...More ...
The federal weather service has issued a heavy rainfall alert for Monday for most of New Brunswick, and that includes Fredericton and surrounding communities.
In an update posted at 4:42 a.m. Sunday, Environment and Climate Change Canada’s weather service reissued the rainfall warning for Monday for the province.
“Heavy rain is expected,” it said. “The frozen ground has a reduced ability to absorb this rainfall.”

For Fredericton, the weather service called for a chance of showers throughout the day Sunday, but by 7 p.m. Sunday night, that changes to a 100 per cent chance of rain, at times heavy.
Rainfall is expected to amount to 40 to 70 millimetres by Monday morning, but areas that see the heaviest rain will see the potential for even more, Environment and Climate Change Canada reported.
The rainfall is predicted to continue until Monday evening, it said.
“Strong winds and mild temperatures will accompany the rain, leading to significant snowmelt and runoff,” the alert stated, adding it’s likely to change to snow over parts of northwest New Brunswick before the precipitation ends Monday night.
“Heavy downpours can cause flash floods and water pooling on roads. Localized flooding in low-lying areas is possible.”
The federal weather service is calling for temperatures as high as 13 C in Fredericton on Monday.
The New Emergency Measures Organization issued an advisory about the impending rainstorm through social media, and NB Power reported it’s monitoring the situation as well.
“We are currently monitoring the weather,” the provincial utility said on social media. “Crews are ready to respond, if outages occur.”
The Fredericton Independent can be reached at [email protected].
10 Dec 2023 12:50:23
CBC News Brunswick
4 months, 3 cities and 4 appointments later, Moncton man finally passes road test
Passing his road test with Service New Brunswick turned into a test of patience for Shubham Rathore of Moncton, who wanted to upgrade to a Class 4 licence, which would allow him to work as a tax ...More ...

Passing his road test with Service New Brunswick turned into a test of patience for Shubham Rathore of Moncton, who wanted to upgrade to a Class 4 licence, which would allow him to work as a taxi driver.
10 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
What makes art Canadian?
The Beaverbrook Art Gallery’s new curator of Canadian art says he’s honoured to help the gallery enrich its collection. ...More ...
The Beaverbrook Art Gallery’s new curator of Canadian art says he’s honoured to help the gallery enrich its collection.
10 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
If our women need protection, this shelter will make them feel at home
New Brunswick's first on-reserve women's shelter will serve all of the province's Mi'kmaw and Wolastoqiyik communities. ...More ...
New Brunswick's first on-reserve women's shelter will serve all of the province's Mi'kmaw and Wolastoqiyik communities.
10 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
U.S. shuts out Canada, extends dominance at Para Hockey Cup with 8th straight title
Canada suffered a familiar fate in the Para Hockey Cup final on Saturday as the United States came out on top again for its eighth straight gold medal at the tournament. ...More ...

Canada suffered a familiar fate in the Para Hockey Cup final on Saturday as the United States came out on top again for its eighth straight gold medal at the tournament.
10 Dec 2023 03:02:18
CBC News Brunswick
Board of governors votes to keep Université de Moncton's name
The Université de Moncton will keep the name it’s had for the past 60 years. ...More ...

The Université de Moncton will keep the name it’s had for the past 60 years.
9 Dec 2023 20:43:29
River Valley Sun
Friends visiting Scott Siding witness violence, kidnapping at gunpoint
More witnesses testify at Rodney Butler trial in Woodstock By Judy Cole Underhill Two more witnesses at the Rodney Butler trial on Friday told the Provincial court they witnessed a kidnapping a ...More ...
More witnesses testify at Rodney Butler trial in Woodstock
By Judy Cole Underhill
Two more witnesses at the Rodney Butler trial on Friday told the Provincial court they witnessed a kidnapping at gunpoint while seated around a kitchen table at the home of their friend in Scotts Siding.
RCMP charged Butler, 49, of Bulls Creek, with reckless discharge of a firearm, indictable assault, uttering threats, using a handgun to kidnap Chris Demerchant, unlawful confinement, possession of a weapon dangerous to the public peace, possession of a firearm without a licence, and illegal possession of a firearm in a vehicle on Nov. 13, 2021, at Bulls Creek.
The next day, the RCMP was on the scene of a fatal shooting on Route 165 at Bulls Creek. Christine Pelletier-Thibodeau, 35, died as a result of her injuries. Over the next several days, police tape was erected around the property, including Butler’s residence, which was surrounded by a vehicle salvage yard.
On Dec. 8, Krista Grant of Canterbury testified she and her best friend, Kenneth Hatheway, were out gathering fir tips when they decided to stop at the home of their friend Chris Demerchant around 6:30 p.m. Ryan Purvis was there when they arrived. She said Purvis was staying with Demerchant at the time. (Purvis later died in an unrelated 2023 drowning in Woodstock.)
Shortly after their arrival, Purvis left to work on a car that broke down in the woods near Benton. They were seated around the kitchen table with Demerchant when Butler and Pelletier-Thibodeau drove into the yard and entered the home.
Grant said Butler and Demerchant were business partners “doing their car thing.” Butler seemed angry on the day of the incident and wanted to know Purvis’ whereabouts. Demerchant told him Purvis was up the road working on a car.
Butler began to shout and swear at Demerchant and then drove a hunting knife into the center of the table. Grant said she was seated nearby.
“I knew when the knife went in the table, it was serious,” Grant told the court.
Grant stood to say she was leaving, but Pelletier-Thibodeau yelled for her to stay seated. When Demerchant stood, Butler head-butted him, made threats, and insisted he go with him to find Purvis. As they moved toward the door, Pelletier-Thibodeau announced everyone was leaving.
“Rodney said: ‘Krista, you didn’t see me tonight,’” Grant testified. “I said, sounds good to me, buddy.”
Butler then remarked to Demerchant, “Same goes for you.”
Demerchant replied: “I don’t know you.”
Grant said Butler “went ballistic” and pulled a handgun from his waistband.
“I paid your debt,” Butler yelled at Demerchant. “I should shoot you right in the eye.”
“They proceeded to drag Chris out the door without his shoes on,” Grant recalled. “They made him go at gunpoint. He didn’t want to go.”
Demerchant protested to Butler, saying he had family obligations and couldn’t leave.
One by one, the group exited Demerchant’s home. Butler, Pelletier-Thibodeau, Demerchant, and Timothy Grant, who was waiting outside, left together in a Ford Escape. She and Hatheway drove away in his vehicle, both upset by the incident.
They drove to the store in Canterbury and then returned to Scotts Siding, where they saw a van in the ditch with its lights on and bullet holes in the windshield. They checked to see if Demerchant had returned home.
“We didn’t see anyone,” she told the court.
Grant said she made a phone call to Troy Demerchant to warn him his brother had been taken at gunpoint. Troy Demerchant advised them to leave Scotts Siding immediately. She called him again from a churchyard in Canterbury but didn’t call the police.
The next day, Grant said she received a phone call from Chris Demerchant, who told her he had been beaten and wanted her to come over. When she arrived, she didn’t recognize her friend.
“He was beat to pieces,” Grant told the court. “He was all beat to hell. His clothes were ripped. He was covered in blood.”
Grant attended to his wounds, noting Demerchant’s “head was smashed in, and his were eyes swollen shut.” She used salt water to help open his eyes. Demerchant muttered someone else had been shot, but he didn’t know if they survived.
Wiping away tears on the witness stand, Grant said the events surrounding Pelletier-Thibodeau’s death were upsetting for both her and Hatheway.
“I’m sorry someone died,” Grant testified. “I didn’t want to be here today or participate in these hearings at all. I didn’t want any blowback from Rodney or consequences for me or my loved ones.”
During cross-examination, Grant admitted to having a criminal record. She said she didn’t see Ryan Purvis again until 14 months after he got out of jail. She never knew Purvis to carry a gun but acknowledged Demerchant did have guns for hunting.
Grant also testified she saw Butler use alcohol and cocaine in the past and explained that a “goober” used by Butler on the day of the incident was another word for an ice (meth) pill.
Kenneth Hatheway of Irish Settlement testified he was also sitting at the kitchen table inside Demerchant’s home when Butler and Pelletier-Thibodeau arrived. He said the meeting made him fear for his life.
“Tensions were high,” Hatheway told the court. “Rodney had a bone to pick with Chris. They heatedly discussed whatever it was that was bothering him. Rodney pulled a knife out and stabbed it into the table to make his point.”
Hatheway said he did not speak during the incident. He saw Butler get in Demerchant’s face, but Demerchant seemed calm.
“Things went haywire,” Hatheway said when Demerchant answered Butler: “I don’t know you,” as if he was “disowning him.” Hatheway believed Butler misunderstood Demerchant’s statement when he pulled out the handgun.
“I thought we were all dead,” Hatheway stated.
As everyone prepared to leave, Hatheway said he was the first one out the door. On his way outside, he passed Timothy Grant. He hadn’t known him or Pelletier-Thibodeau before that day.
Hatheway saw Demerchant get in a vehicle with Butler, Pelletier-Thibodeau and Timothy Grant. He left the driveway with Krista Grant in his vehicle. They found out later that Pelletier-Thibodeau had been shot and killed at Butler’s home in Bulls Creek.
“It’s a tragic event,” Hatheway told the court. “Someone lost their life. It’s regrettable because it could have been prevented.”
Crown Prosecutors Rodney Jordan and Gwynne Hearn and Defence Counsel Alex Pate led the trial proceedings on Dec. 8 before Associate Chief Judge Brian C. McLean.
The trial was adjourned to Jan. 11 at 9:30 a.m. when Chris Demerchant is expected to deliver a full day of testimony. The crown will also present more police evidence.

The post Friends visiting Scott Siding witness violence, kidnapping at gunpoint first appeared on River Valley Sun.
9 Dec 2023 13:39:02
CBC News Brunswick
Bells to ring out again in uptown Saint John
Saint Johners will likely be familiar with the sound of the Trinity Church bells. They rang out every hour, half-hour and quarter-hour — until one day, they stopped. ...More ...

Saint Johners will likely be familiar with the sound of the Trinity Church bells. They rang out every hour, half-hour and quarter-hour — until one day, they stopped.
9 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
Beaverbrook Art Gallery exhibit dedicated to fierceness of Indigenous women
Newly appointed curator of Indigenous Art at Beaverbrook Art Gallery, Emma Hassencahl-Perley is Wolastoqiyik from Neqotkuk First Nation in New Brunswick. She's curated a new exhibition featuring the w ...More ...

Newly appointed curator of Indigenous Art at Beaverbrook Art Gallery, Emma Hassencahl-Perley is Wolastoqiyik from Neqotkuk First Nation in New Brunswick. She's curated a new exhibition featuring the work of renowned Indigenous artists.
9 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
Prayers offered to Petitcodiac River by Moncton’s Hindu community
About a hundred people gathered to pray to the Petitcodiac River in Moncton. A Hindu ritual called Ganga Aarti, the community also chanted and lit 1200 clay lamps. ...More ...
About a hundred people gathered to pray to the Petitcodiac River in Moncton. A Hindu ritual called Ganga Aarti, the community also chanted and lit 1200 clay lamps.
9 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
St. Stephen gets drop-in centre for homeless people after controversial emergency order
St. Stephen is getting a round-the-clock drop-in centre for homeless people, after a week of controversy that saw the local council declaring a state of emergency and the province cancelling it. ...More ...
St. Stephen is getting a round-the-clock drop-in centre for homeless people, after a week of controversy that saw the local council declaring a state of emergency and the province cancelling it.
2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
How to set personal boundaries without being the family Grinch
Not all family dynamics are as cheerful as Whoville, so therapist Kayla Breelove Carter has some advice on how to set boundaries in conversations around personal matters, politics and religion this up ...More ...

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2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
Judge denies motion to certify class action against fired Moncton nurse
A New Brunswick judge has denied a motion to certify a class action by eight women alleging a Moncton nurse inappropriately administered a drug that resulted in the emergency births of their babies. ...More ...

A New Brunswick judge has denied a motion to certify a class action by eight women alleging a Moncton nurse inappropriately administered a drug that resulted in the emergency births of their babies.
2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
PC majority puts another limit on pension bill debate
The Higgs government cut short debate on controversial pension legislation again Friday, putting another limit on top of the legislature’s already restricted consideration of the bill. ...More ...

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2 years ago
Fredericton Independent
Disgraced lawyer faces prison term
Subscribe nowA former New Brunswick deputy attorney general who stole hundreds of thousands in client funds seven years ago will learn days before Christmas how long his stint in prison will be.Yassin ...More ...
A former New Brunswick deputy attorney general who stole hundreds of thousands in client funds seven years ago will learn days before Christmas how long his stint in prison will be.
Yassin Choukri, 56, of Riverview but formerly of Fredericton, appeared before Court of King’s Bench Justice Robert Dysart at the Moncton Law Courts on Friday for a sentencing hearing.
Choukri had originally opted for a King’s Bench trial by judge and jury trial on eight counts of fraud but this fall, he pleaded guilty instead to a single count of indictable theft, encompassing those offences.
Crown prosecutor Vicki Doucette, reading in an agreed statement of facts before the court Friday, noted Choukri established a law practice in Fredericton and had numerous clients.
As is customary in private practice, he held thousands of dollars in client funds in his trust account as part of his legal work.
Court heard Friday that in 2016, Choukri’s business partner reported Choukri had apparently left Fredericton and had abandoned his practice, and when addressing the situation, the Law Society of New Brunswick discovered his trust account - in which client funds were supposed to be held - had been emptied.
Doucette - a Nova Scotia prosecutor who was brought in to handle the case given Chourki’s former role as deputy minister of justice and deputy attorney in this province - said he took the following amounts that rightly belonged to the following clients:
$11,500$ from Milemore Holdings Ltd.,
$250,000 from Economical Insurance Group,
$918 from George Bunting,
$25,000 from Jean Marc Bélanger,
$112,500 from Sylvie Perreault,
$31,790 from Albina Stuckless,
$5,000 from Dorothy McNaughton
and $44,440 from Allan and Lucilla Wilson.
All told, he took $481,148 that wasn’t his, the prosecutor said, noting that in each instance, Choukri breached his fiduciary duties to those clients.
"The clients' money was used to repay advances of funds drawn mainly from Casino New Brunswick," Doucette said.
She and defence lawyer Gilles Lemieux offered a joint recommendation on sentence Friday: three years in prison.
The prosecution isn’t seeking a restitution order since there’s no chance Choukri will ever be able to repay what he stole.
‘He did not conduct himself with integrity’
Shirley MacLean - the province’s official languages commission - was serving as the law society’s registrar of complaints in 2016 when Choukri’s crimes came to light, and she read a victim-impact statement aloud in court Friday on behalf of the law society.
While the proceedings were conducted mainly in French, MacLean’s statement was in English.
She said it was her role to investigate complaints and facilitate compensation for clients who’d been wronged by their legal counsel.
When Choukri’s business partner advised the law society of his disappearance, MacLean said, the organization stepped in to ensure client files were protected and moved along to new counsel.
“Almost immediately, it became clear there were financial irregularities,” she said.
“No funds were remaining in Yassin Choukri’s trust account.”
The thefts from clients ranged in scope from just under $1,000 to one amounting to a quarter-million-dollar loss, she noted.
Court heard Choukri had represented the Economical Insurance Co. and had received $250,000 in funds in his trust account on behalf of the insurer.
“But the insurance company never received them,” she said.
But it wasn’t just larger corporations that fell victim to Choukri’s misconduct, she said.
There were regular people, who had mortgage money, retainers and other money with Choukri that was supposed to sit protected in his trust account, she said.
“These are not faceless incidents… not victimless crimes,” MacLean said.
The law society itself became a victim of Choukri’s actions from before and after his crimes were discovered, she said.
It was learned that after leaving New Brunswick, Choukri was living in the Toronto area, she said, but he refused to co-operate with the law society’s investigations and complaints processes.
With each complaint, she said, the law society was required to serve him with documents, which he avoided at every turn.
The organization spent almost $5,000 in process serving fees, MacLean said.
Furthermore, it paid out numerous amounts to affected clients in compensation for Choukri’s misconduct, she said, depleting it drastically.
“People trust their lawyers,” MacLean said, noting that Choukri met with clients and told them he’d guard their money or pay them much needed settlements he’d secured for them.
“He deliberately misled them … He did not conduct himself with integrity, but the Law Society of New Brunswick certainly did.”
She said Choukri did harm to the legal progression, noting he’d actually held one of the highest legal positions in New Brunswick when he served as the deputy justice minister and deputy attorney general as part of the Progressive Conservative government of Bernard Lord years ago.
But another victim’s voice was heard Friday that wasn’t damning, and instead offered forgiveness.
Among the clients whose funds were taken was Milemore Holdings Ltd., and representative Larry Fullerton read a statement to the court Friday.
“He was a good lawyer for me… He helped me on a lot of cases,” Fullerton said.
“Mr. Choukri is a good person. He helped me … I forgive him for what he has done.”
He asked Dysart to weigh the good the disgraced lawyer did over his career against the mistakes he’s made.
He said Friday morning’s proceedings marked the first time he’s laid eyes on Choukri since 2015.
“No one’s asked me for this,” Fullerton said, noting it was sad that “a distinguished career… has now gone by the wayside.”
Gambling addiction
The prosecutor noted that precedents direct that a federal prison sentence was necessary to denounce his conduct given the amount of money stolen in this case and the breach of trust Choukri committed against his clients.
She cited cases with similar circumstances that demonstrate the three-year recommendation was within an appropriate range of sentence in Chourki’s case.
Doucette said the significant amount of money taken from victims and by extension the law society and the breach of trust were aggravating factors the court had to address.
But she also acknowledged there were mitigating factors in Chourki’s favour.
The prosecutor acknowledged and Lemieux emphasized that the first-time offender’s criminal conduct was driven by a gambling addiction.
Chourki was a regular and well-known presence at Casino New Brunswick in Moncton in the years leading up to the theft and his departure from the province.
Lemieux said his client sought counselling and treatment for his gambling issue once his theft came to light.

Court heard that in addition to his trouble with the law and the self-destruction of his career, Choukri is in massive debt.
The agreed statement of facts filed with the court noted there are three outstanding civil-court judgments against him: $237,889.52 for the Bank of Nova Scotia, $228,129.07 for Canada Law Financing and $275,047.29 for the Law Society of New Brunswick.
Choukri apologized to his victims for taking the money and failing his clients, noting he was deeply remorseful and ashamed for what he’d done.
Dysart reserved his decision on sentence to Dec. 19.
Choukri remains free on conditions pending the sentencing decision.
During the complaints and disciplinary processes the law society pursued in 2017, it was determined Choukri had taken $720,000 in client funds.
Despite the fact the misconduct came to light in late 2016, it wasn’t until the summer of 2020 that the Fredericton Police Force charged him criminally.
A Canada-wide warrant was issued for Choukri’s arrest, and he was arrested in the Toronto area in August 2020.
He was escorted back to New Brunswick in police custody, but he was released on conditions in September.
Though he had been living and practising in Fredericton at the time of his crimes, among the conditions of Choukri’s release was to reside at a friend’s home in Riverview.
Many of the preliminary proceedings in the case unfolded in the courts in Moncton, for the convenience of the various parties involved, but Choukri’s jury trial was supposed to be held in the Fredericton district, where he committed his criminal actions.
However, after he pleaded guilty to the single theft count in Moncton in October, it was decided to hold the sentencing hearing at the Moncton Law Courts.
Don MacPherson can be contacted at [email protected].
2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
3 years sought for Fredericton lawyer who gambled away client funds
Seven years after a former Fredericton lawyer fled the province after gambling away hundreds of thousands of dollars of his clients' money, he stood before a judge in Moncton apologizing. ...More ...

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2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
Wanted: your photos, video of the Picture Province
Do you have a really cool photo or video from New Brunswick that you would like to share with us? Send them in! ...More ...
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CBC News Brunswick
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Public Safety Minister Kris Austin is considering revoking American Iron & Metal's salvage dealers' licence following a scathing report into the massive Sept. 14 fire at the Saint John scrapyard, and ...More ...
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2 years ago
River Valley Sun
Key witness testifies in trial of Bulls Creek man
Rodney Butler on trial for kidnapping, assault, firearms charges in connection with incident that lead to death of Butler’s partner A key witness in the trial of Rodney Butler told the court ...More ...
Rodney Butler on trial for kidnapping, assault, firearms charges in connection with incident that lead to death of Butler’s partner
A key witness in the trial of Rodney Butler told the court about the kidnapping and severe beating of a Scotts Siding man that preceded the shooting death of Butler’s former partner, Christine Pelletier-Thibodeau. Pelletier-Thibodeau, 35, was killed after she accidentally walked into the line of fire.
Butler, 49, of Bulls Creek, is charged with reckless discharge of a firearm, indictable assault, uttering threats, using a handgun to kidnap Chris Demerchant, unlawful confinement, possession of a weapon dangerous to the public peace, possession of a firearm without a licence, and illegal possession of a firearm in a vehicle on Nov. 13, 2021, at Bulls Creek.
On the day following the kidnapping, the RCMP was called to the scene of a fatal shooting on Route 165 at Bulls Creek. Over the next several days, police tape was erected around the property, including Butler’s residence, which was surrounded by a vehicle salvage yard.
Timothy Grant, 31, of Canterbury, is also facing charges in relation to the incident. Grant testified for a full day on Dec. 7, describing in detail how he witnessed several acts of violence while in the company of Butler on Nov. 13, 2021.
Grant pleaded not guilty to using a handgun to kidnap Chris Demerchant, unlawful confinement, and indictable assault at Scotts Siding on Nov. 13, 2021. His provincial court trial was adjourned to Feb. 29 and March 1, 2024.
In court on Thursday, Dec. 7, Grant said he was an unwilling participant and only tagged along with Butler that day to help his friend retrieve a vehicle. By that night, however, Grant was scared for his own life and looking for a way to get home safely.
“It was a horrible situation to be in,” Grant told the court. “I got sucked into something I wanted no part of.”
On the day of the incident, Grant testified he arrived at Butler’s residence around 4 p.m. They left for Scotts Siding to pick up an old van at Demerchant’s residence. They were travelling in Pelletier-Thibodeau’s Ford Escape with her behind the wheel. Her young son was strapped in a car seat in the back.
Once at Scotts Siding, Butler got the old van started. Demerchant was not at home, but his mother, who lived next door, agreed to let them take the vehicle. Butler headed toward Skiff Lake, driving the old van while Grant and Pelletier-Thibodeau followed in her Ford Escape.
The old van broke down along the way, so Pelletier-Thibodeau pushed it from behind with her vehicle until they reached a property Butler used at Skiff Lake. Grant said there was damage to the front bumper of Pelletier-Thibodeau’s vehicle.
A little later, they decided to go for beer and food in Canterbury. Grant said he saw Butler pop a pill that he called a “goober.” All was well until Butler said he wanted to assault Ryan Purvis (now deceased in an unrelated 2023 drowning in Woodstock).
The trio dropped Pelletier-Thibodeau’s son off at a babysitter in Woodstock. She drove to a Woodstock First Nation pot store and returned to Scotts Siding. Butler said he wanted to talk to Demerchant about Purvis.
When they arrived, Grant said he could see people sitting at the kitchen table near the front window of Demerchant’s trailer. The three of them walked toward the home. Grant waited on the porch while Butler and Thibodeau went inside. Grant could hear yelling and screaming during an argument between Butler, Pelletier-Thibodeau and Demerchant.
About two minutes later, Grant returned to the car and waited in the front seat. From the vehicle, he saw Butler slam his fist on the kitchen table. They exited the residence with Demerchant, who climbed in the backseat with Butler. Pelletier-Thibodeau got back behind the wheel, and they drove off. Grant thought they were going to find Ryan Purvis.
Another argument quickly ensued between Butler and Demerchant in the backseat. Butler began punching his victim and then pistol-whipped Demerchant around the head with a nine-millimeter handgun. The beating went on.
Grant said he could see what was happening from the front seat. Demerchant tried to fight back but eventually began crying and screaming for Butler to stop. When Butler pointed the gun at his legs, Demerchant screamed, “No, no.”
“He was scared, very scared,” Grant recalled.
During the mayhem, Grant worried for his own safety when, for an instant, the gun came close to the front seat. He said he tried to stop the violence by grabbing Butler around the shoulders, but “it didn’t do any good.”
Demerchant told Butler where Purvis was located, and they headed toward Benton. Pelletier-Thibodeau was still driving. They spotted Purvis up ahead on an old woods road. Purvis was using a different van to jump-start a black Pontiac Grand Prix parked near the woods with a pile of fir tips in the back.
Butler got out and walked toward Purvis, who was seated in the van. Grant said he heard nine or 10 shots being fired. It was around 6:30 p.m., Grant said, and he did not believe Purvis returned any fire. He said Purvis soon fled the scene “full blast” by putting his van in reverse. He struck Pelletier-Thibodeau’s Ford Escape on the way by.
“I was surprised he (Purvis) was still alive,” Grant testified.
Butler returned to the back seat with Demerchant and told Pelletier-Thibodeau to follow Purvis. They drove back to Scotts Siding, where Purvis was sitting in his van with its engine smoking. Thibodeau rear-ended the van as Purvis tried to make his exit. Purvis fell under the van, got up, and ran into Demerchant’s home. Butler went in after him. Still in the vehicle, Grant saw Butler throw a chair. He thought Purvis might have been inside looking for a gun. He said he never saw Purvis again that night.
“I wanted to get out of that yard,” Grant stated. “I thought there could be more gunfire.”
Grant ran out of the driveway and down Scotts Siding Road. Pelletier-Thibodeau followed in the Ford Escape. Then Purvis’ van came barreling out of the driveway in reverse, hit a mailbox and went backwards into a ditch. He saw Butler come up out of the ditch near the van.
By this time, Demerchant was trying to get out of the backseat of Pelletier-Thibodeau’s car.
She tried to stop him, and they began fighting outside the vehicle.
“She was giving him a pretty good going over,” Grant recalled.
Demerchant fell onto the ground, with Pelletier-Thibodeau and Butler both making an attack.
“They were laying the boots to him,” said Grant.
Demerchant struggled to his feet, and Pelletier-Thibodeau and Butler returned him to the backseat of her Ford Escape.
“He wasn’t free to go. He had no choice,” Grant said.
Grant said he did not intervene in the altercation. He returned to the front passenger seat of the Ford Escape. Pelletier-Thibodeau was still driving, and Butler and Demerchant were together again in the backseat. Demerchant was badly injured and bloodied. Their next stop was at the residence of Earl DeLong in Dead Creek, where everyone exited the vehicle.
“I told Chris I wanted no part of it,” Grant said. “I don’t think it registered. He was in shock.”
While Butler, Pelletier-Thibodeau and Demerchant went inside DeLong’s residence, Grant saw his chance to leave. He found service for his cell phone and called his girlfriend to pick him up. He was walking down the road to meet her when he saw the Ford Escape drive by. His girlfriend took him back to Butler’s place at Bull’s Creek so he could retrieve his own vehicle. It was around 9 p.m. On the way home, he notified Demerchant’s family about the incident but didn’t call the police.
“I got hold of his family and let them deal with it,” Grant explained.
The next day, he was shocked when he got a call from Butler, who was crying.
“He said he shot Christine,” Grant testified. “I said ‘where,’ and he said it was about 20 to 30 feet from the front door.”
During their conversation, Grant said Butler explained Pelletier-Thibodeau was killed with the nine-millimetre handgun. The shooting happened outside his home at Bull’s Creek when she accidentally walked into the line of fire.
“I felt bad about it and the fact that Christine lost her life over it,” Grant told the court.
Under cross-examination, Grant said he “tried to stay out of it” but ended up giving a complete statement to the police after he was charged as an accomplice to the kidnapping.
Other testimony at the trial came from three RCMP officers who participated in the investigation as part of the force’s major crime unit.
One officer told the court about multiple bullet holes found in a black Grand Prix parked on a woods road near Benton. The vehicle also had a passenger-side window shot out, and there was broken glass on the ground. Shell casings were found on the road nearby.
Another police officer testified about taking a statement from Chris Demerchant as well as photos of his facial, head and body injuries that required follow-up treatment at a hospital.
There was also police testimony about bloodstains on the inside of the Ford Escape, mainly in the backseat area. A quantity of cannabis and over $1,100 in cash was also found inside the vehicle, along with Pelletier-Thibodeau’s driver’s licence and Butler’s debit card.
Chris Demerchant is expected to take the stand on Dec. 8.
Crown Prosecutor Rodney Jordan and Defence Counsel Alex Pate are participating in the trial proceedings before Associate Chief Judge Brian C. McLean.
The post Key witness testifies in trial of Bulls Creek man first appeared on River Valley Sun.
2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
Police board questions value of work municipalities want before they make RCMP decision
The board overseeing the Codiac Regional RCMP has voted to delay work that Moncton, Dieppe and Riverview want complete ahead of deciding whether to keep the Mounties as their police service. ...More ...
The board overseeing the Codiac Regional RCMP has voted to delay work that Moncton, Dieppe and Riverview want complete ahead of deciding whether to keep the Mounties as their police service.
2 years ago
Fredericton Independent
Oromocto bank robbery suspect denied bail
Subscribe nowThough he’s already been in custody more than three months, a suspect in an attempted bank robbery case out of Oromocto went through a long-deferred bail hearing Thursday, but to no ...More ...
Though he’s already been in custody more than three months, a suspect in an attempted bank robbery case out of Oromocto went through a long-deferred bail hearing Thursday, but to no avail.
Chad Atkinson, 30, of Farnham Road in Haneytown, has been in custody since his arrest the afternoon of Aug. 30 at the TD Bank branch on Onondaga Street in Oromocto.
He’s accused of attempting to rob the branch and employee Samson Adeyemo, possessing a Crossman Arms Co. pellet gun for the purpose of committing an offence, carrying a concealed weapon and violating a probation order imposed on him in May, stemming from events that day.
Atkinson also faces Aug. 29 counts of driving with an elevated blood-alcohol level and breaching his probation as well.
The defendant had previously asked to defer his bail hearing on the Aug. 30 charges, so it was held finally Thursday in Fredericton provincial court.
Atkinson appeared in court by video-conference from the Saint John Regional Correctional Centre for the proceeding.
Evidence presented at the bail hearing and the reasons for the judge’s decision are subject to a publication ban until the case concludes.
Judge Natalie LeBlanc ruled Thursday the Crown had shown cause why Atkinson should remain in custody until his matters before the court are resolved.
The bail hearing was actually held the day before Atkinson’s scheduled trial. However, following LeBlanc’s decision, court heard that the trial will have to be postponed.
Duty counsel Gerald Pugh, who represented Atkinson at the bail hearing, noted that the defendant’s defence counsel - Legal Aid New Brunswick staff lawyer Doug Smith - was unavailable for Friday’s scheduled trial due to illness.
As such, the legal aid commission is endeavouring to reassign his case, so an adjournment of the trial will be unavoidable.

The Oromocto detachment of the RCMP, in a news release issued late this summer, reported it received a call about a robbery in progress after a male suspect entered the TD branch at around 2:15 p.m. Aug. 30 and demanded money.
The release indicated the suspect told bank staff he had a firearm in a backpack he was carrying.
That call prompted a major police response at the bank in the strip mall, with officers armed with rifles surrounding the location. Atkinson was arrested shortly thereafter.
Don MacPherson can be contacted at [email protected].
2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
New Brunswick Museum announces new home for priceless artifacts, prepares for move
The New Brunswick Museum has secured a new research and collections centre on Saint John's west side, as it prepares to break ground next year on its estimated $150 million new home. ...More ...

The New Brunswick Museum has secured a new research and collections centre on Saint John's west side, as it prepares to break ground next year on its estimated $150 million new home.
2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
Austin's attack on 'leftist agendas' aims to draw sharp contrast with Liberals
Kris Austin’s comments this week blaming federal Liberal policies for the death of a homeless man in St. Stephen may have shocked some New Brunswickers — but they are hardly a surprise. ...More ...

Kris Austin’s comments this week blaming federal Liberal policies for the death of a homeless man in St. Stephen may have shocked some New Brunswickers — but they are hardly a surprise.
2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
Need a ride? New ride-hailing service moves into N.B
‘U-Ride’ is a new ridesharing app that promises safe, reliable, and affordable rides. Is this overdue in New Brunswick? ...More ...
‘U-Ride’ is a new ridesharing app that promises safe, reliable, and affordable rides. Is this overdue in New Brunswick?
2 years ago
CBC News Brunswick
3 rare Maud Lewis paintings fetch well above estimates in online auction
The paintings attracted interest — and bids — from all over North America, according to Sarah Jones of Jones Auction House in Saint John. ...More ...

The paintings attracted interest — and bids — from all over North America, according to Sarah Jones of Jones Auction House in Saint John.
2 years ago
Fredericton Independent
Two in N.B. fall ill from tainted melons
Subscribe nowAn ongoing Salmonella outbreak connected to tainted cantaloupes sold throughout the country has been detected in two cases in New Brunswick.The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) issue ...More ...
An ongoing Salmonella outbreak connected to tainted cantaloupes sold throughout the country has been detected in two cases in New Brunswick.
The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) issued an alert in late November about Malichita and Rudy brand cantaloupes, reporting an investigation found they were linked to cases of Salmonella illness in five provinces: British Columbia, Ontario, Quebec, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador.
New Brunswick wasn’t among the locations of the reported illnesses at the time, but in an update issued Thursday evening, PHAC advised there were now two reported cases of Salmonella illness in the province.

“As of Dec. 7, there have been 129 laboratory-confirmed cases of Salmonella Soahanina, Sundsvall and Oranienburg illness linked to this outbreak in the following provinces: British Columbia (15), Ontario (17), Quebec (91), Prince Edward Island (2), New Brunswick (2) and Newfoundland and Labrador (2),” the Thursday advisory stated, noting that there were other potential cases under investigation as well.
“Forty-four individuals have been hospitalized. Five deaths have been reported.”
Most of those who have fallen ill were under the age of five years or over the age of 65, PHAC reported, and people became sick between mid-October and mid-November.
Recall warnings were issued for the two brands of cantaloupes, and those who bought the affected products or suspect they might have are advised to throw the fruit out.
The recalled products were distributed in Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec and possibly elsewhere, the agency said.
U.S. agencies are also investigating the outbreak, the advisory said.
Symptoms - which include fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, headaches and abdominal cramps - usually arise six to 72 hours after exposure to Salmonella bacteria, and typically last for four to seven days.
“People who are infected with Salmonella bacteria can spread Salmonella to other people several days to several weeks after they have become infected, even if they don't have symptoms,” the advisory said.
“Salmonella can spread by person-to-person contact and contaminated surfaces. Most people who become ill from a Salmonella infection will recover fully after a few days without treatment, but it can also cause severe illness and hospitalization.”
The Fredericton Independent can be reached at [email protected].
8 Dec 2023 00:16:18
CBC News Brunswick
Moncton menorah lit after closed-door controversy reversed
The mayor apologized following a council decision to end its 20-year tradition of lighting the Hanukkah menorah in front of city hall. ...More ...
The mayor apologized following a council decision to end its 20-year tradition of lighting the Hanukkah menorah in front of city hall.
7 Dec 2023 22:21:00
CBC News Brunswick
After St. Stephen man's death, grieving mother wants him remembered as father, friend
Sheila Dickerson says she wants people to know that Adam was a kind-hearted and thoughtful person, with lots of friends who cared for him. ...More ...

Sheila Dickerson says she wants people to know that Adam was a kind-hearted and thoughtful person, with lots of friends who cared for him.
7 Dec 2023 21:32:24
CBC News Brunswick
Rent bank, St. Stephen solution on the way soon, says housing minister
The Higgs government says two measures to address the province’s housing crunch will take effect within days. ...More ...

The Higgs government says two measures to address the province’s housing crunch will take effect within days.
7 Dec 2023 20:34:58
Fredericton Independent
Wanted Fredericton man located, remanded
Subscribe nowA Fredericton man described by city police last week as being wanted in connection with several investigations is in custody and facing a long list of charges from two different policing ...More ...
A Fredericton man described by city police last week as being wanted in connection with several investigations is in custody and facing a long list of charges from two different policing agencies.
The Fredericton Police Force issued an advisory through social media Nov. 28 about Timothy Robert Dunphy, reporting he was "arrestable on several police files."
Officers were seeking tips from the public on his whereabouts.
In the days since issuing that alert, the police force removed the social media post, but there had been no word about Dunphy’s status.
However, he turned up on the Fredericton provincial court docket this week.
Dunphy, 50, of Victory Street in Fredericton, appeared in court by video conference Thursday from the Saint John Regional Correctional Centre, scheduled to go through a bail hearing.
He faces RCMP charges alleging he broke into a detached garage belonging to Steven Basque, stealing Basque’s 2023 Can-Am all-terrain vehicle, possessing that stolen ATV, impaired driving, dangerous driving and causing property damage to Basque’s garage door, all in Maugerville on Sept. 14.
Dunphy is also charged by the Fredericton Police Force with subsequent alleged crimes.
He’s charged with stealing an electric bike worth less than $5,000 belonging to Princess Auto on Oct. 23; possessing a stolen 2009 Ford Fusion belonging to Robert Donald Moorcraft, dangerous driving and fleeing from police on Nov. 23; causing property damage to a cable and lock belonging to the southside Kent Building Supplies store and stealing tools belonging to Napa Auto Parts, both on Nov. 25.
Duty counsel Gerald Pugh said the defendant was seeking to adjourn his bail hearing briefly, asking for it to be set over to Friday so he could arrange for a witness to testify on his behalf.
Judge Natalie LeBlanc granted the adjournment as requested.
Don MacPherson can be contacted at [email protected].
7 Dec 2023 20:21:52
CBC News Brunswick
Licensed carpenters should be required on N.B. job sites, inquest jury says
The jury in a coroner's inquest is recommending that all job sites be required to have a licensed carpenter on site in the wake of the death of a carpenter who died after falling from a truss in a par ...More ...

The jury in a coroner's inquest is recommending that all job sites be required to have a licensed carpenter on site in the wake of the death of a carpenter who died after falling from a truss in a partially constructed home in New Brunswick.
7 Dec 2023 19:48:28
Fredericton Independent
NB SPCA sees spike in abandoned pets
Subscribe nowThe New Brunswick SPCA is urging people experiencing difficult financial and housing issues not to abandon pets as they struggle to deal with their circumstances.The NB SPCA issued a news ...More ...
The New Brunswick SPCA is urging people experiencing difficult financial and housing issues not to abandon pets as they struggle to deal with their circumstances.
The NB SPCA issued a news release this week reporting that its animal-protection officers have witnessed a dramatic increase in the number of reports of pets being abandoned by owners who have been forced to move during difficult times.
It said that thus far in 2023, it received 321 reports of pets being left behind as their owners had to vacate their apartments or homes, as compared with 141 in 2022.

NB SPCA animal-protection officers are discovering this is happening because pets owners are under immense pressure due to limited financial resources and a housing crunch, the release said.
When people are forced to move to a new apartment, it said, for example, owners leave pets behind because their new building might not allow animals.
The cost of pet food and veterinary care is also believed to be a factor, the NB SPCA said.
Executive director Lesley Rogers said people need to know there are other, better ways to address those obstacles and challenges in their lives.
“There are other solutions beside abandoning your pets. Owners can reach out for help from
friends or family members to help rehome their pets. Rehoming a pet with people you
associate with makes for an easier transition for the animal,” she said in the release.
“Another option would be to reach out to your local SPCA animal shelter, local cat/dog rescue group or the NB SPCA.”
Tony Porter, the chief protection officer with the organization, warned there can be fallout for those who abandon pets, both in homes they vacate or outside.
“Owners of abandoned pets can face charges under the SPCA Act, resulting in fines, a criminal record and prohibition orders preventing them from owning pets,” he said in the release.
“Pet owners who do not provide shelter and fail to provide medical care to their animals can face serious consequences.”
Animals’ health can be compromised quickly if they’re unattended and without adequate food, water or shelter, Porter said.
“Dogs and cats can start to show signs of dehydration after only 24 hours,” he said in the release.
“In some of our recent calls for abandoned animals, the NB SPCA rescued animals in very poor physical condition and tragically also found deceased animals.”
He noted they’ve also seen cases in which owners are leaving dogs and cats in remote, rural areas to fend for themselves, which puts the animals at risk of hunger, dehydration or serious injury by wild animals.
“These abandoned pets are scared when left on their own to survive,” Porter said in the release.
“They no longer have the protection and support from their owners which causes fear and stress on the animal.”
The NB SPCA urged anyone with concerns that an animal has been abandoned, neglected or abused to call its 24/7 hotline at 1-877-722-1522.
The Fredericton Independent can be reached at [email protected].
7 Dec 2023 16:35:20
Fredericton Independent
Sex offender gets house arrest for breaches
Subscribe nowA Nasonworth man who didn’t keep the sex-offender registry up to date on where he was living and skipped court in the spring avoided a jail term this week.Mark Douglas Harnish, 25, ...More ...
A Nasonworth man who didn’t keep the sex-offender registry up to date on where he was living and skipped court in the spring avoided a jail term this week.
Mark Douglas Harnish, 25, of Route 101, appeared in Fredericton provincial court Monday for sentencing, having previously admitted to two criminal offences.
Harnish pleaded guilty this fall to breaching a court order under the Sex Offender Information Registration Act (SOIRA) on Feb. 28, 2022, by failing to report in person to the registration centre to advise of where he was living, and to failing to attend court May 24 on that charge.
Breaches of court orders can often lead to short stints in provincial jail, but provincial court Judge Cameron Gunn instead imposed conditional-sentence orders totalling four months, to be served in the community.
For the first two months of the conditional sentence, the offender will be under house arrest save for limited exceptions, and then he’ll be subject to a nightly curfew for the remaining two months.
Following that, he’ll be on probation for 12 months.
Harnish is subject to the SOIRA order as a result of a 2019 conviction for sexually assaulting a woman two years prior.
Don MacPherson can be contacted at [email protected].
7 Dec 2023 15:59:45
River Valley Sun
Scenes from Woodstock’s Santa Claus Parade
Residents line streets for main event during busy weekend Families lined Main Street in Woodstock Sunday afternoon, Dec. 3, to take in the highlight of a busy holiday season weekend. The parade ...More ...
Residents line streets for main event during busy weekend
Families lined Main Street in Woodstock Sunday afternoon, Dec. 3, to take in the highlight of a busy holiday season weekend.
The parade proved the signature event in a weekend which included Wake Up Santa courtesy of NBCC Woodstock students, Festive Pet Photos by the Carleton County Animal Shelter, the Woodstock Baptist Church’s drive-through Nativity Scene and craft sales at Woodstock First Nation and Woodstock Legion.
Check out some of the scenes from the parade:










The post Scenes from Woodstock’s Santa Claus Parade first appeared on River Valley Sun.
7 Dec 2023 12:00:00
Fredericton Independent
N.S. man faces incest allegations in N.B.
Subscribe nowThe defence for a Nova Scotia man accused of having intercourse with his underage daughter in recent years asked for his case to be adjourned Wednesday, noting it has yet to receive discl ...More ...
The defence for a Nova Scotia man accused of having intercourse with his underage daughter in recent years asked for his case to be adjourned Wednesday, noting it has yet to receive disclosure.
The 57-year-old Dartmouth man appeared in Fredericton provincial court Wednesday, charged with alleged sex offences against his daughter.

There’s a court-ordered publication ban protecting the girl’s identity, and given the relationship in the case, the defendant can’t be named either.
The accused faces charges of sexual assault, incest and sexual interference, all alleged to have occurred between Jan. 1, 2019, and Sept. 30, 2022, in the Coles Island area of New Brunswick, about an hour’s drive east of Fredericton.
The incest charge specifically alleges the defendant had sexual intercourse with the complainant knowing that she “was his daughter by blood relationship.”
Defence lawyer Edward Derrah said that as was the case the last time the case was before the court, he still hadn’t received disclosure of the Crown file. He asked that his client’s election of mode of trial and pleas be adjourned until he can get that and review it with the accused.
Judge Cameron Gunn set the matter over to Dec. 22.
Don MacPherson can be contacted at [email protected].
7 Dec 2023 11:26:46
CBC News Brunswick
Mini-satellite constructed by N.B. university students set to orbit Earth
After a few years of hard work, a team of post-secondary students have put together a miniature cube satellite, which will be launched into orbit. ...More ...

After a few years of hard work, a team of post-secondary students have put together a miniature cube satellite, which will be launched into orbit.
7 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
Savour the many flavours of Senegal
Food by Fatou brings Senegalese culinary skills to Fredericton. With traditional cooking methods, Fatou Sadore hopes to showcase her country’s heritage and offer the people of Fredericton new tasteb ...More ...
Food by Fatou brings Senegalese culinary skills to Fredericton. With traditional cooking methods, Fatou Sadore hopes to showcase her country’s heritage and offer the people of Fredericton new tastebud-tingling delights.
7 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
4 of 12 soil sites tested after AIM fire show higher than expected levels of metals, chemicals
The Department of Health has updated its guidance on Saint John garden produce and cannabis that may have been exposed to smoke from the massive fire at American Iron and Metal's scrapyard three mo ...More ...

The Department of Health has updated its guidance on Saint John garden produce and cannabis that may have been exposed to smoke from the massive fire at American Iron and Metal's scrapyard three months ago, after four of 12 soil sampling sites showed "higher than expected levels of metals or chemicals."
7 Dec 2023 10:00:00
CBC News Brunswick
5 Questions with Emily Blair
Weaver and cultural worker Emily Blair is the Artistic Director of Connexion ARC, Fredericton’s only artist-run centre. Matt Carter In August, weaver and cultural worker Emily Blai ...More ...
Weaver and cultural worker Emily Blair is the Artistic Director of Connexion ARC, Fredericton’s only artist-run centre. Matt Carter In August, weaver and cultural worker Emily Blair was announced as…
The post 5 Questions with Emily Blair appeared first on Grid City Magazine.
7 Dec 2023 00:40:34
CBC News Brunswick
Kris Austin cancels St. Stephen state of emergency, blames 'Trudeau policies' for problems
Less than 48 hours after its declaration, Minister of Public Safety Kris Austin terminated St. Stephen's state of emergency on homelessness. ...More ...
Less than 48 hours after its declaration, Minister of Public Safety Kris Austin terminated St. Stephen's state of emergency on homelessness.
6 Dec 2023 23:33:05
CBC News Brunswick
Subcontractor wasn't wearing hard hat when he suffered fatal fall, inquest hears
Jurors at an inquest into the death of 59-year-old Daniel Moore heard Wednesday that the construction subcontractor wasn't wearing a hard hat when he fell about nine feet and fatally hit his head. ...More ...

Jurors at an inquest into the death of 59-year-old Daniel Moore heard Wednesday that the construction subcontractor wasn't wearing a hard hat when he fell about nine feet and fatally hit his head.
6 Dec 2023 21:31:05











