Categories
Lakeshore OPP Police Press Releases

Terrance-Gavin KENNEDY Was Arrested

(LAKESHORE, ON) – A driver has been charged following a collision in Lakeshore.

 At approximately 7:28 p.m. on December 19, 2025, members of the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) investigated a single vehicle collision on Rochester Townline Road in the Municipality of Lakeshore.

As a result of the investigation, Terrance-Gavin KENNEDY, 63-years-old of Belle River was arrested and charged with the following Criminal Code offences:

  • Operation while impaired – alcohol and drugs
  • Operation while impaired – blood alcohol concentration (80 plus)
  • Dangerous Operation

The accused was scheduled to appear in the Ontario Court of Justice – Windsor on December 31, 2025, to answer to the charges.

A 90-day Administrative Driver’s License Suspension (ADLS) and a seven-day vehicle impoundment was initiated for both drivers as per statute.

The safety of our community is paramount, and we will continue to enforce impaired driving laws to keep our roads safe. “Traffic Safety is Everyone’s Responsibility”. 

If you have an urgent traffic complaint or if you suspect someone is driving while their ability to operate a motor vehicle is impaired by drugs of alcohol, please call 9-1-1 immediately.

If you have a non-emergency traffic complaint, you may also call 1-888-310-1122. Should you wish to remain anonymous, you may call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS).

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Kasabonika Lake First Nation OPP Police Press Releases Sioux Lookout

Janis MORRIS – Impaired Driving

(SIOUX LOOKOUT, ON) – On December 20, 2025, at approximately 10:30 p.m., members of the Sioux Lookout Detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) were conducting a Festive RIDE on Wellington Street.

Officers observed a motor vehicle attempt to evade the RIDE program. A traffic stop was initiated, and it was determined the operator was impaired by alcohol. The operator was subsequently placed under arrest and transported to the Sioux Lookout OPP Detachment for further testing.

As a result, Janis MORRIS, 41-years-old, of Kasabonika Lake First Nation, has been arrested and charged with:

  • Operation While Impaired – alcohol and drugs
  • Failure or Refusal to Comply with Demand

The accused has been released from custody and is scheduled to appear before the Ontario Court of Justice in Sioux Lookout on January 27, 2026.

A 90-day Administrative Driver’s Licence Suspension (ADLS) was issued, and the vehicle has been impounded for seven days.

The OPP remains committed to taking alcohol/drug-impaired drivers off our roads, trails and waterways through enforcement and public education. If you suspect that someone is driving while impaired by alcohol or drugs, it is important to call 9-1-1 to report it.

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Huron North Middlesex South Huron

One Dead South Of Exeter

(SOUTH HURON, ON) – A single-vehicle rollover collision on London Road in the Municipality of South Huron has claimed the life of a 79-year-old North Middlesex resident. 

On Friday, December 19, 2025, just after 12:00 p.m., Huron County Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) along with the South Huron Fire Department, and Huron County Paramedics, responded to a single-vehicle collision on London Road, just south of the Town of Exeter.

Emergency services located a damaged pickup truck with two occupants. The vehicle passenger was transported to a local hospital with life-threatening injuries and later succumbed to their injuries. The driver of the involved pickup truck was treated for minor injury.

The deceased was a 79-year-old male resident of North Middlesex. 

Our thoughts go out to the families of those individuals involved.

The OPP closed London Road for several hours as investigators examined the scene.

Any person with information regarding this collision should contact Huron County OPP at 1-888-310-1122. 

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Kapuskasing OPASATIKA OPP Police Press Releases

3 Dead Following Collsion

(OPASATIKA, ON) – The Kapuskasing Detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) is investigating a fatal motor vehicle collision involving a commercial motor vehicle and a passenger vehicle.

On Sunday, December 21, 2025, at approximately 12:30 a.m., officers responded to a two-vehicle collision involving a tractor trailer and a pickup truck, between Chauvette Road and Hyundai Road in Opasatika Township.

The pickup truck was occupied by four individuals. The 41-year-old driver was transported to hospital by Emergency Medical Services (EMS) with non life threatening injuries. The three remaining occupants of the pickup truck, a 41-year-old, a 15-year-old, and a 12-year-old, were pronounced deceased at the scene. No injuries were reported for the driver of the tractor trailer.

The OPP is working alongside the Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario, with assistance from the OPP Traffic Incident Management and Enforcement (TIME) Unit, and OPP Technical Collision Investigators (TCI), as the cause of the collision remains under investigation.

Anyone who may have witnessed the collision or has dashcam footage from the area at the time of the incident, is asked to contact the Kapuskasing OPP at 1-888-310-1122. To remain anonymous, tips may be submitted to Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS) or online at ontariocrimestoppers.ca.

Categories
North Huron OFP WFP Wingham

Chad Kregar Now Personally Liable For Snow Dumped On Sidewalks #StandYourGround

(Wingham, North Huron) — At some point, negligence stops being ignorance and becomes a choice.

That moment has arrived for North Huron Fire Chief, Chief By-law Enforcement Officer, and Public Safety Officer Chad Kregar.

Last week, Kregar was directly informed—face to face—of active pedestrian hazards created by snow and ice left on municipal sidewalks, including routes used by seniors, children, and people with mobility issues. The condition of those sidewalks is no longer hypothetical, disputed, or unknown. It is now documented, observed, and acknowledged.

That matters—because in Canadian law, once a public authority is aware of a hazard, the standard of care changes.

Notice Changes Everything

Courts across Canada have been clear: municipalities and their officers have a positive duty to maintain public infrastructure in a reasonably safe condition. Sidewalks are not decorative. They are safety infrastructure.

The Supreme Court of Canada has repeatedly held that:

  • Municipalities cannot create hazards on pedestrian routes and then disclaim responsibility.
  • Delegating or ignoring maintenance duties does not eliminate liability.
  • Once a risk is known, failure to act becomes negligence, not policy.

The Ontario Ombudsman has echoed this principle: public safety officials are expected to intervene when preventable hazards are brought to their attention, regardless of internal politics or convenience.

As of now, North Huron has notice.
And so does Chad Kregar personally, in his capacity as Fire Chief, Chief By-law Enforcement Officer and Public Safety Officer.

By-law Enforcement Is Not Optional

A recurring claim from Town Hall is that municipal by-laws “don’t apply” to the municipality itself. That position is legally fragile—and dangerous.

Clean yards, property standards, and safety by-laws exist to eliminate hazards, not to protect the entity that created them. If a by-law officer can order a private resident to clear a sidewalk within 72 hours—or face enforcement—then refusing to apply the same safety standard to municipal property raises serious questions of unequal enforcement and bad faith.

Public safety officers are not hired to look the other way when the Township is the source of the danger.

What Refusal to Act Risks

If hazardous sidewalks remain after notice, the consequences are no longer abstract:

  • Civil liability for injuries caused by known hazards
  • Personal exposure for officials who knowingly decline to mitigate risk
  • Insurance complications if claims arise after documented warnings
  • Ombudsman scrutiny for systemic failure to enforce safety standards
  • Coroner’s inquests if a serious injury or death occurs
  • Public loss of confidence in emergency and safety leadership

No Fire Chief wants to explain—after the fact—why a known, preventable hazard was left in place.

This Is the Moment to Choose

Chad Kregar now stands at a clear fork in the road.

One path is simple:
He has acknowledged the hazard. He must order it corrected. Ensure municipal crews stop using sidewalks as snow storage. Treat public safety as non-negotiable.

The other path leads to court appearances, public shaming, paperwork, and humilation—until someone falls, gets hurt, or worse.

Public safety officers are entrusted with authority because lives depend on it. That trust is not symbolic. It carries responsibility, accountability, and—when warnings are ignored—consequences.

The public has done its part.
The hazard has been identified.
The warning has been given.

What happens next is no longer an accident, it’s all on Chad Kregar.

Categories
Area OPP OFP OPP WFP

Intense Public Confrontation Raises Alarm Over Secret Police & PLT Conduct

(WINGHAM, ON) — Serious questions are being raised about the role of Provincial Liaison Team (PLT) officers Paul Richardson (Badge 12861) and Robert Hann (Badge 13409) after a tense and widely witnessed confrontation at a recent North Huron council meeting—an incident residents say crossed the line from “keeping order” into stifling democratic participation.

According to multiple members of the public and press present, the two men—dressed in plain clothes and identifying themselves as OPP—positioned themselves inside the council chambers before the meeting began, a time when residents traditionally question council members because no public questions are permitted once the meeting is called to order.

When a resident calmly questioned council about unresolved public safety issues—including unmaintained sidewalks and a visibly tattered cenotaph flag—the interaction drew the immediate attention of Richardson and Hann. Witnesses say the officers moved in close, interrupted the exchange, and attempted to shut down questioning despite the meeting not yet being in session.

What escalated the situation further, residents say, was the officers’ refusal to provide basic identification.

Multiple requests for business cards or police ID were declined. No explanation was provided. No supervisor was summoned. For many in the room, the refusal set off alarm bells.

“If you’re acting under the authority of the state, you don’t get to hide who you are,” said one attendee. “That’s not public safety—that’s intimidation.”

Rather than calming the situation, the officers’ conduct appeared to galvanize the room. Members of the public and press stood together, questioned the officers directly, and demanded accountability. With cameras rolling, the two men were escorted out of the building by the public—not forcibly, but firmly—after failing to justify their presence or actions.

The confrontation raises broader concerns about the mandate and behavior of PLT units, which are intended to act as liaisons, not enforcers, at civic gatherings. Critics argue that PLT officers are increasingly being deployed to chill speech, discourage scrutiny of elected officials, and create a climate where ordinary residents feel watched rather than heard.

“This isn’t a protest zone. This is a council chamber,” said another witness. “The square mile belongs to the people, not to plainclothes officers leaning over citizens to make them uncomfortable.”

No charges were laid. No disturbances were reported—other than the actions of the officers themselves.

To date, neither Richardson nor Hann have publicly explained why they refused to identify themselves, why they intervened in lawful pre-meeting questioning, or who authorized their presence. The OPP has also not clarified whether this conduct aligns with PLT policy.

For many residents, the issue is no longer about one meeting—it’s about a pattern.

When police units attend municipal meetings not to protect safety but to manage dissent, democracy itself is put on notice.

Calls are now growing for PLT officers to stand down, for clear limits on police involvement in municipal governance, and for elected officials to reaffirm that questioning authority is not a threat—it is the foundation of public life.

As one resident put it bluntly:

“If the state doesn’t like being questioned, it’s not the people who have crossed the line.”

The next council meeting is expected to draw increased public attendance, with residents urging others to arrive early, bring cameras, and insist—peacefully—on transparency.

The message from the square mile is clear: back off, or be held to account.

Categories
Area OPP OFP OPP WFP

Public Swarms OPP Officers & Escorts Them From Building/Council Chambers #StandYourGround #ItsTime #CamerasUp

(Wingham, North Huron) It didn’t start with shouting.
It didn’t start with anger.
It started the way all real change starts — with one person asking a fair question.

A citizen stood in a public building, at a public meeting, asking public officials to do something simple and decent: replace a tattered cenotaph flag and explain why promises were broken. A question rooted in respect — for democracy, for accountability, for the Fallen.

Then something darker tried to creep in.

Two individuals claiming to be OPP moved not to answer the question, but to silence it. They refused to show identification. They confronted the questioner. They attempted to shut down inquiry, scrutiny, and speech — the very oxygen of a free society.

And for a moment, that familiar pressure appeared — the kind that makes people look down, step back, stay quiet.

But this time… it didn’t work.

Something rare happened in Wingham.

The public did not scatter.
The press did not retreat.
No one shouted. No one shoved. No one panicked.

Instead, people did something far more powerful.

They stood.

Cameras came up — calmly, steadily, deliberately.
Not as weapons, but as witnesses.
Not in anger, but in truth.

A peaceful public swarm formed — not to intimidate, but to refuse intimidation.

In that moment, fear had nowhere left to live.

The questions remained.
The cameras remained.
The people remained.

And the would-be silencers, exposed by daylight and accountability, left the building — not by force, but by the unmistakable pressure of a community that remembered who democracy belongs to.

That night marked something important.

It wasn’t about police.
It wasn’t about politics.
It wasn’t about personalities.

It was about dignity.

It was the realization that authority only works when the public believes it is unquestionable — and the second we question respectfully, peacefully, and together, the balance shifts.

This is how democracy survives.
Not through shouting.
Not through violence.
But through presence.

Through people who show up early.
Who ask clear yes-or-no questions.
Who refuse to be rushed, brushed off, or bullied.
Who understand that respect is not requested — it is required.

The New Wingham Order is simple:

  • Fear no longer governs.
  • Cameras stay up.
  • Questions get asked.
  • Dignity is non-negotiable.
  • Democracy belongs to the people — not behind closed doors.

📅 Next Council Meeting
January 12, 2026
🕠 Arrive by 5:30 PM — questions start early.

Come calm.
Come respectful.
Come prepared.

History doesn’t change because someone yells.
It changes when ordinary people decide they will no longer look away.

The death of fear has already begun.
Now it’s time to keep showing up.

Categories
Area OPP Central Huron Huron East Police Press Releases

Assaults In Huron East – One Arrested

(HURON EAST, ON) – On December 07, 2025, members of the Huron County Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) investigated a matter involving intimate partners in the Municipality of Huron East.

As a result of the investigation, OPP learned that the involved suspect had allegedly committed criminal acts against their partner.

A 40-year-old individual from Central Huron has been arrested and charged under the Criminal Code with the following offences:

–      Assault – Spousal – (three counts),

–      Assault Causing Bodily Harm,

–      Uttering Threats to Cause Death or Bodily Harm – (two counts),

–      Mischief,

–      Fail to Comply with Undertaking.

The accused was processed and later released from custody with a later court date scheduled at the Ontario Court of Justice – Goderich.

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Area OPP Goderich OPP Police Press Releases

Repeat Offender Arrested Again In Goderich #3Strikes

(GODERICH, ON) – On December 07, 2025, members of the Huron County Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) investigated a matter involving intimate partners in the Town of Goderich.

As a result of the investigation, OPP learned that the involved suspect had allegedly committed several criminal acts against their partner.

A 33-year-old individual from Goderich has been arrested and charged under the Criminal Code with the following offences:

–      Criminal Harassment,

–      Mischief Under $5,000,

–      Trespassing by Night,

–      Fail to Comply with Release Order – (three counts).

The accused was processed and held for a bail hearing where they were later released from custody with a later court date scheduled at the Ontario Court of Justice – Goderich.

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Area OPP Howick OPP Police Press Releases

Assault With Weapon In Howick

(HOWICK TWP, ON) – On December 06, 2025, members of the Huron County Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) investigated a matter involving intimate partners in the Township of Howick.

As a result of the investigation, OPP learned that the involved suspect had allegedly committed several criminal acts against their partner.

A 45-year-old individual from Howick Twp has been arrested and charged under the Criminal Code with the following offences:

–      Assault – Spousal,

–      Assault with a Weapon – Spousal,

–      Mischief,

–      Careless Storage of Firearm, Weapon, Prohibited Device, or Ammunition – (six counts).

The accused was processed and later released from custody with a later court date scheduled at the Ontario Court of Justice – Goderich.

Categories
Area OPP OPP Police Press Releases Wellington North

Mount Forest Weapons Bust – Robert HALASHEWSKI-TAYLOR

(WELLINGTON NORTH TOWNSHIP, ON) – One person has been charged following the execution of a search warrant in Mount Forest.

On November 18, 2025, at approximately 7:00 a.m., members of the Wellington County Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) Community Street Crime Unit (CSCU) executed a search warrant at a residence in Mount Forest in relation to a drug trafficking investigation. The warrant was executed with the assistance from West Region Canine Unit, the West Region Emergency Response Unit and the Wellington County Community Response Unit.

The search resulted in the seizure of various weapons, ammunition and indicia related to drug trafficking.

As a result of the investigation, Robert HALASHEWSKI-TAYLOR, a 26-year-old from Durham, is charged under the Criminal Code with:

  • Careless storage of firearm, weapon, prohibited device or ammunition (two counts)
  • Knowledge of unauthorized possession of firearm

The accused was held in custody pending a bail hearing.

The Wellington OPP is requesting anyone with information to call 1-888-310-1122.

Should you wish to be anonymous, you can contact Crime Stoppers Guelph Wellington at www.csgw.tips or toll free at 1-800-222-TIPS or 8477. If your information leads to an arrest, you may be eligible for a cash reward of up to $2,000.

Categories
Quinte West Trenton

Jacob VALE – Drunk Driving, Etc.

(QUINTE WEST, ON) – The Quinte West Detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) has laid an impaired driving charge.

On Friday, December 12, 2025, at approximately 10:00 p.m., the Quinte West OPP conducted a traffic stop which resulted in an arrest and multiple charges.

Jacob VALE, age 23, from Trenton, was charged with:

•               Operation while impaired – alcohol

•               Operation while impaired – blood alcohol concentration (80 plus)

•               Drive – No insurance

•               Drive vehicle or boat with cannabis readily available

•               Driving motor vehicle with open container of liquor

•               Speeding – 1-49km/h over the posted limit

The accused was released from custody and is scheduled to appear at the Ontario Court of Justice in Belleville on January 8, 2025.

If you suspect that someone is driving or about to drive impaired, call 9-1-1 and report it. You could save a life.

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OPP Police Press Releases Quinte West

Austin COONEY & Daniel VANCLIEF Were Arrested

(QUINTE WEST, ON) – Two people face trafficking charges after a drug seizure in Quinte West.

The Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) East Region Community Street Crime Unit (CSCU) began an investigation earlier this year into drug trafficking in the area of downtown Trenton. 

On Friday, December 19, 2025, officers with CSCU, assisted by members of the OPP Emergency Response Team and members of the Quinte West Detachment, executed a search warrant at an apartment on Creswell Drive.

Officers seized over 32 grams of suspected fentanyl, more than 2.5 grams of suspected cocaine and more than two grams of suspected crack cocaine, as well as cash and items typically associated with drug trafficking. Two people were arrested without incident.

Austin COONEY, age 30 and Daniel VANCLIEF, age 53, both from Quinte West, have each been charged with:

  • Possession of Schedule I substance for the purpose of trafficking – two counts
  • Possession of proceeds of property obtained by crime under $5000
  • Fail to comply with a probation order

The accused were held for a bail hearing before the Ontario Court of Justice in Belleville to be held on Friday, December 19, 2025.

Categories
BLANDFORD-BLENHEIM CAMBRIDGE OPP Police Press Releases

Police Claim They Were Assaulted – #FilmThePolice

(BLANDFORD-BLENHEIM, ON) – Two officers were injured after locating two suspects in a stolen motor vehicle.

On December 16, 2025, at approximately 8:30 p.m., members of the Oxford OPP detachment were on patrol in the area of Oxford Road 29 and Highway 401, when they were alerted by the Automated Licence Plate Reader (ALPR) of a possible stolen vehicle.

An interaction between officers and two vehicle occupants occurred, which resulted in both officers sustaining minor injuries. The occupants resisted arrest and departed the scene after causing damage to a police cruiser.

Investigators were able to identify both individuals. Members of the Guelph Police Service assisted the OPP investigation, taking both of the accused suspects into custody in Cambridge.

Tessa Shaw, 20-years-old, of Cambridge, was charged with:

  • Assault a Peace Officer with a weapon (Two counts)
  • Possession Property obtained by Crime Under $5,000
  • Possession Property obtained by Crime Over $5,000
  • Dangerous Operation
  • Flight from Peace Officer
  • Resist Peace Officer

Another individual is in custody and is currently before the courts on an unrelated matter.  This individual is not charged.

Both officers were treated and released from hospital.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Oxford OPP at 1-888-310-1122. Information can also be provided anonymously to Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).

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OPP Pembroke Police Press Releases

More Impaired Drivers Arrested – Names Released

(PEMBROKE, ON) – The Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) 2025 Festive R.I.D.E. (Reduce Impaired Driving Everywhere) campaign commenced on November 20, 2025, and will continue until January 1, 2026. During the fourth week of the campaign from December 11 to December 17, 2025, officers from the Upper Ottawa Valley Detachment of the OPP conducted 25 RIDE checks throughout the detachment area.

A three-day driver’s license suspension was issued to a driver after a RIDE check in North Algona-Wilberforce Township on December 13, 2025. Beyond the RIDE checks, several other drivers were charged with impaired driving-related offences during the week. 

On December 14, 2025, at approximately 12:50 a.m., police investigated an occupied vehicle parked at the Meath Hill boat launch adjacent to Highway 17 in the Township of Whitewater Region (WWR). A Roadside Screening Device was utilized, and the driver was transported to the detachment for further testing.

As a result of this incident 40-year-old Amanda CLOSTRE of Cobden has been charged with the following Criminal Code (CC) offence:

·        Operation while impaired – blood alcohol concentration 80mg plus

On December 14, 2025, at approximately 6:45 p.m., police stopped a vehicle for speeding on Highway 41 in Bonnechere Valley Township. A Roadside Screening Device was utilized, and the driver was transported to the detachment for further testing.

As a result of this incident 43-year-old Lindsey PULLIN of Eganville has been charged with the following CC, Provincial Offences Act (POA), and Highway Traffic Act (HTA) offences:

·        Operation while impaired – alcohol

·        Operation while impaired – blood alcohol concentration 80mg plus

·        Breach of POA probation – three counts

·        Speeding 1-49 Km/h over posted limit

On December 14, 2025, at approximately 8:30 p.m., police responded to single vehicle collision on Highway 17 near Josie Lane in Laurentian Hills. The involved SUV left the roadway and struck a guardrail, no injuries were reported. A Roadside Screening Device was utilized, and the driver was transported to the detachment for further testing.

As a result of this incident 60-year-old John COLLINS of Thunder Bay has been charged with the following CC offences:

  • Operation while impaired – alcohol
  • Operation while impaired – blood alcohol concentration 80mg plus

On December 16, 2025, at approximately 3:30 p.m., police stopped a vehicle for speeding on Highway 17 near Finnerty Road in WWR. The driver was taken into custody and transported to the detachment for testing.

As a result of this incident 28-year-old Benjamin LECUYER of Ottawa has been charged with the following CC, HTA, and Compulsory Automobile Insurance Act (CAIA) offences:

  • Operation while impaired – alcohol
  • Operation while impaired – blood alcohol concentration 80mg plus
  • Drive motor vehicle – perform stunt excessive speed
  • Speeding 50+ Km/h over posted limit
  • Drive motor vehicle – no currently validated permit
  • Fail to have insurance card

On December 16, 2025, at 7:50 p.m., police observed an SUV strike a traffic light pole at the intersection of Petawawa Boulevard and Limestone Trail in Petawawa. The vehicle continued driving and was stopped at short distance away. No injuries were reported as a result of the collision. A Roadside Screening Device was utilized, and the driver was transported to the detachment for further testing. Test results were more than double the legal blood alcohol limit.

As a result of this incident 63-year-old Cheryl PENNELL of Petawawa has been charged with the following CC offences:

  • Operation while impaired – alcohol
  • Operation while impaired – blood alcohol concentration 80mg plus

All accused individuals were released and are scheduled to appear at the Ontario Court of Justice in Pembroke in the New Year. The accused drivers also had their driver’s licence suspended for 90 days and their vehicles were towed and impounded for seven days.