Tag Archive

Court slaps down over-zealous Toronto cops

Published on October 30, 2010 By SiteEditor

National Post – October 29, 2010
Judge finds David Chen not guilty; or, The Grocer Wore Grey
By Peter Kuitenbrouwer

In a cliffhanger ruling that mixed references to film noir and pulp fiction, Justice Ramez Khawly of the Ontario Court of Justice took two hours yesterday, in a court packed with 100 people, to get to his decision: David Chen, the vigilante grocer, is not guilty on all charges.

Canadian socialists support citizens arrest

Published on October 15, 2010 By SiteEditor

Two Members of Parliament have introduce Private Members’ Bills to strengthen the right to make citizens’ arrests. These bills were introduced by NDP MP Olivia Chow, wife of NDP leader Jack Layton (C-565), and Liberal MP Joe Volpe (C-547).

Businessman documents cop incompetence in citizen’s arrest defence

Published on October 10, 2010 By SiteEditor

National Post – Oct. 8, 2010
‘Don’t come here again’
By Peter Kuitenbrouwer

Wang “David” Chen, the Toronto grocer charged for detaining a thief, for the first time told a packed and rapt courtroom yesterday his own version of what happened in May of 2009 at his store, the Lucky Moose Food Mart.

National Post condemns McGuinty’s war on self-defence

Published on October 6, 2010 By SiteEditor

National Post – October 6, 2010
Ordinary citizen vs. ‘the system’
By Lorne Gunter

Dalton McGuinty to ban self-defence in Ontario

Published on October 5, 2010 By SiteEditor

The same weekend that ChristianGovernance discusses gun control and how a position predicated on the Lordship of Christ requires the abolition of gun control, we see media coverage that Ontario’s paternalistic Premier, Daddy Dalton, is taking the opposite position. (Excerpts of two articles are below with links to the complete articles.) We make the case that self-defence is a much more important reason than hunting and sports shooting for decriminalizing firearm ownership. In contrast, a Saturday National Post article reports that, in a case of citizen’s arrest, the Ontario government is arguing that “a Toronto grocer’s attempt to expand citizen’s-arrest powers is akin to seeking a return to the Middle Ages when there were no police forces.”