Monthly Archives: April 2026

Our Minority Coddling Courts Reduce 24-year Jail Sentence for Fraudster from Sierra Leone Who Conned Seniors Out of $140,000 to Less Than Two Years House Arrest

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Our Minority Coddling Courts Reduce 24-year Jail Sentence for Fraudster from Sierra Leone Who Conned Seniors Out of $140,000 to Less Than Two Years House Arrest 

Fraud­ster stole nearly $140K from seni­orsCalgary HeraldTARA BRADBURY1 Apr 2026•

A man who defrauded seni­ors in New­found­land and Nova Sco­tia out of nearly $140,000 in a “grand­par­ent scam” will serve just under two years of house arrest after the court reduced what ini­tially totalled a 24-year sen­tence.Charles Gil­len, 25, also has four years to pay back the stolen money that was never recovered.“Fraud schemes per­pet­rated against the eld­erly are despic­able crim­inal actions that amount to an abuse of seni­ors,” Chief Justice Ray­mond Whalen said, not­ing eld­erly people are more fre­quently the tar­get of such scams. Gil­len was sen­tenced in the Supreme Court of New­found­land and Lab­rador in St. John’s on Monday, on 16 fraud charges tied to scams car­ried out in early 2023 against vic­tims aged 70 to 88.Royal New­found­land Con­stabu­lary officers arres­ted Gil­len on a plane at St. John`s air­port that was ready to take off for Montreal. He was car­ry­ing more than $31,000 in cash in his wal­let, an envel­ope and a sock. Invest­ig­at­ors later recovered another $36,440 from boxes he had already shipped to Que­bec.His eld­erly vic­tims received a phone call from someone pos­ing as a grand­child or another young rel­at­ive in urgent legal trouble, who told them they needed thou­sands of dol­lars in cash for bail.A “law­yer” then came on the line and instruc­ted the senior to with­draw cash and hand it over to a “bonds­man” who would visit their home. He warned the seni­ors not to tell any­one because of a court-ordered “gag order.”All those who met with the “bonds­man” gave a descrip­tion that matched Gil­len. The court has accep­ted that Gil­len’s role in the scam was lim­ited to that, and oth­ers involved in the fraud have not been iden­ti­fied.Three of the seni­ors wrote vic­tim impact state­ments describ­ing feel­ing vul­ner­able, embar­rassed, and fear­ful to answer the phone or door. They said they were wor­ried about their grand­chil­dren’s safety and their own fin­an­cial secur­ity, and struggled with los­ing their sav­ings.Gil­len also addressed the court, apo­lo­giz­ing to the vic­tims and the com­munity and say­ing he had com­mit­ted the crimes as a broke uni­versity stu­dent who had made a bad decision. He said his own grand­par­ents had raised him to do bet­ter.Pro­sec­utor Mark James sought a prison term of 42 to 45 months and defence law­yer Andrea Viz­solyi argued for a 16- to 34-month period of house arrest.On Monday, the judge said he would impose a sen­tence of 18 con­sec­ut­ive months for each of Gil­len’s indi­vidual charges, for a total of 24 years.Under the prin­ciple of total­ity in Cana­dian law — which ensures an offender sen­tenced for mul­tiple crimes at once does not receive an unduly harsh over­all sen­tence when the indi­vidual terms are added together — Whalen reduced that over­all sen­tence to four years.The judge then deduc­ted time as fol­lows:❚ Pre-trial cus­tody: Gil­len received credit for 295 days spent on remand, cal­cu­lated at the stand­ard rate of 1.5 days for each day served❚ Harsh jail con­di­tions: His sen­tence was reduced by an addi­tional 200 days due to excep­tion­ally bad con­di­tions at Her Majesty’s Pen­it­en­tiary, includ­ing inad­equate facil­it­ies, over­crowding and exper­i­ences of racism❚ Harsh bail con­di­tions: A fur­ther 100 days were deduc­ted to account for restrict­ive bail con­di­tions the judge found to be pun­it­ive, includ­ing the wear­ing and expense of an ankle mon­itor for two years Gil­len has 718 days left to serve. Whalen accep­ted inform­a­tion presen­ted by an Impact of Race and Cul­ture Assess­ment, a pre-sen­ten­cing report pre­pared for Black and other racial­ized offend­ers that provides the courts with inform­a­tion about the per­son’s back­ground.He did not accept, however, that there was a link between Gil­len’s crimes and his life exper­i­ences, which include com­ing to Win­nipeg with his grand­par­ents as refugees from Sierra Leone after los­ing both his par­ents in war, and exper­i­en­cing racism and dis­crim­in­a­tion while grow­ing up and as a uni­versity stu­dent.“He was motiv­ated by sheer greed and drawn by a prom­ise of easy money,” the judge said.Gil­len’s moral culp­ab­il­ity is very high, Whalen said, and the sen­tence must prop­erly denounce the crime. Whalen gran­ted the defence’s request for Gil­len to serve the remain­ing time on house arrest in Man­itoba, so he can work to pay back $70,455 of the vic­tims’ money that was not recovered.One of the con­di­tions is that he live with his grand­par­ents.

Replacement Not Diversity

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We Don’t Want to Become India, Says Quebec Immigration Minister Francois Roberge

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Quebec Immigration Minister Jean François Roberge is facing backlash after defending tighter immigration control with a controversial statement.

He said Quebec does not aim to “become India” but instead compared the province to Switzerland, adding that it is better to have a smaller, wealthier population than a larger, poorer one.

The remarks have sparked criticism from many who view them as offensive and discriminatory, while others say they reflect concerns around population growth and economic sustainability.

The debate is now raising broader questions about immigration policy, language, identity, and the direction Quebec wants to take.

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