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Baseball fan critically injured in fight outside Dodger Stadium following playoff game

LOS ANGELES — A fight outside Dodger Stadium after a playoff game left a fan critically injured and police searching for suspects in the latest round of violence at the ballpark.

The victim was hospitalized Tuesday, but few other details about the Friday night brawl were available, including the person's age and gender, Los Angeles police Officer Ricardo Hernandez said.

The fight broke out around 10:30 p.m. in a parking lot after the Dodgers lost the opening game of the National League Division Series to the New York Mets, 3-1.

An argument between fans quickly escalated into violence, Hernandez said. It wasn't clear whether those involved were fans of rival teams. Detectives were interviewing witnesses and reviewing stadium surveillance footage, Hernandez said.

Dodger spokesman Steve Brener said Tuesday that the team had no comment.

Security at Dodger Stadium came under national scrutiny after a 2011 attack in the parking lot on opening day left San Francisco Giants fan Bryan Stow with brain damage. Two men — Marvin Norwood and Louie Sanchez — pleaded guilty in the beating and went to prison.

Stow sued the Dodgers and their former owner Frank McCourt, blaming them for the attack because of insufficient security and lighting. A jury faulted the team, along with Sanchez and Norwood, and awarded Stow nearly $18 million after a six-week trial in 2014.

The Associated Press

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Fort St. John Mayor Lori Ackerman to speak at this year’s LNG Conference
Turcotte murder trial resumes with more Crown testimony following brief hiatus

SAINT-JEROME, Que. — A former cardiologist on trial in the stabbing deaths of his two young children searched the Internet for material related to suicide and methanol in the days leading up to the slayings.

Guy Turcotte's jury trial is hearing today that his laptop computer was searched by provincial police investigator Michel Dufour, who noted the search terms.

Dufour says the word 'suicide' did not come up prior to Feb. 15, 2009 — the same date Turcotte's laptop was used to gain access to what was described as a discussion forum on suicide.

Turcotte has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of his son Olivier, 5, and daughter Anne-Sophie, 3, but has admitted to causing their deaths on Feb. 20, 2009.

The trial resumed today after sitting for just a few days last week due to jurors being unavailable.

Dufour's examination of the computer also turned up searches on methanol — a toxic alcohol — and on ethylene glycol.

The jury has heard Turcotte arrived at the hospital the morning after the slayings with an unknown level of toxic alcohol in his bloodstream.

A container of windshield washer fluid — which contains methanol — was seized by police in the bathroom of the family home.

Turcotte's lawyer, Pierre Poupart, attempted Tuesday to discredit the information gathered as incomplete, error-laden and incomprehensible.

"Pages and pages of inexplicable scribbles," Poupart said at one point about the computer records filed in evidence.

The Canadian Press

Harper’s putting cash on table as Conservatives bid to stall Liberal momentum

OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Stephen Harper is literally putting cash on the table in an effort to halt the momentum of Justin Trudeau's Liberals in the closing days of the federal election campaign.

With less than a week until Canadians go to the polls next Monday, the Conservatives have twice staged low-tech stunts designed to illustrate how much they say Liberal tax changes will cost voters as Harper attempts to pick apart the Liberal platform.

Harper played the role of game show host again Tuesday morning at a partisan rally in west-end Toronto, calling out Liberal tax increases as a pizza store owner placed bills on a table to the backdrop of a loudly ringing cash register.

"The tax hikes the Liberals talk about, they are not just numbers in a pamphlet," said the prime minister, without jacket or tie and with his blue shirt sleeves rolled up. "They are real dollars and I want to show you again today what the payroll tax hikes look like."

Conservative party videographers took tight shots as the pizza store owner laid bills on a table to repeated "Ka-Chings!"

"Hand it over, Dino," Harper coached. "I hope you counted that carefully."

The Conservatives staged a similar display on the Thanksgiving weekend and the stunt appears destined for party advertising in the closing days of this extraordinary 78-day campaign, the longest in modern Canadian history.

All three major party leaders were in the Greater Toronto Area on Tuesday morning as polls continue to suggest an electorate in flux and swathes of seat-rich Ontario up for grabs.

Trudeau ventured into an NDP-held riding in Toronto to make the pitch that the Liberal platform is the most progressive on offer in this election. The Liberal pitch came a day after the party launched an open appeal to former Progressive Conservatives to join their fold.

Trudeau appears to be trying to peel off voters from both the New Democrats and Tories, while hoping to win over strategic voters who might see an incumbent NDP MP as the best vehicle for removing Harper's Conservatives from office.

"You do have a choice — multiple choices," Trudeau said. "I won't pretend that you don't.

"To suggest otherwise would be arrogant and an insult to your intelligence, so I'm not asking you to look at the polls. I'm asking you to look at our platform."

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair, framed by a crowd of partisans waving orange "STOP HARPER" signs, spoke to a rally in Oshawa, Ont., just east of Toronto. He continued to maintain that New Democrats are only a few dozen seats short of unseating the Conservatives — notwithstanding that every party starts with zero seats when Parliament is dissolved and a new general election campaign begins.

"Mr. Trudeau in this campaign has spent more time going after the NDP than he's spent going after Stephen Harper," Mulcair charged. "I challenge Mr. Trudeau to start taking on Stephen Harper."

Harper is visiting the highly-symbolic Toronto riding of Etobicoke-Lakeshore, where former Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff lost his seat in the 2011 campaign en route to the worst Liberal electoral drubbing in party history.

Etobicoke is also Ford country, as in the well-known Toronto city councillors Rob and Doug Ford, both of whom were in attendance for Harper's morning rally.

Bruce Cheadle, The Canadian Press

Harper ‘betrayed and abandoned’ me in insect-infested cell, journalist says

TORONTO — Freed journalist Mohamed Fahmy lashed out at Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Tuesday, accusing him of washing his hands of his case when intervention with the highest levels of the Egyptian government was most needed.

Speaking at a news conference in Toronto, Fahmy said he initially refused to believe Harper was not bringing his full weight to bear on Egyptian authorities.

"While you here citizens in Canada and around the world clearly understood the urgency of the situation we faced in prison in Egypt, the Harper government did not," Fahmy said.

"Sitting in that prison cell, it was difficult not to feel betrayed and abandoned by Prime Minister Harper."

Instead of taking action to lean on the Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, Fahmy said Harper turned the case over to lower-level members of his government who simply didn't have the power to help.

Fahmy, 41, was the Cairo bureau chief for Al-Jazeera English when he was arrested in Egypt in 2013 with two colleagues. He was ultimately convicted of terror-related charges and sentenced to three years in prison in a widely condemned retrial this year for airing what a court described as "false news'' and coverage biased in favour of the now-banned Muslim Brotherhood.

Fahmy, who finally arrived in Toronto on Sunday after el-Sisi pardoned him, said he met Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau on Monday evening and planned a meeting with NDP Leader Tom Mulcair on Tuesday to talk about issues of media freedom and the wrongful imprisonment of journalists.

He said both opposition leaders had tried to help as best they could during his long ordeal, while members of the Conservative government were unwilling to talk to him or his lawyers.

"There are no words to describe when you are wrongfully convicted and sitting in a cold cell infested with insects nurturing a broken shoulder," Fahmy said. "But when you're there, your only hope is that your prime minister will do everything in his power to get you out of there."

A senior government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, has said Harper did indeed speak with Egypt's president and sent several letters on Fahmy's behalf.

Fahmy said if that happened, he was "thankful" but he said Harper should have been "more transparent" about making such a call. There's little doubt Canada's stance was "very mild." He also accused former foreign affairs minister John Baird of prolonging his incarceration when he said Canada would not prosecute Fahmy if Egypt kicked him out.

Despite his strong language, Fahmy said he was not endorsing anyone for the Oct. 19 election.

He also drew attention to other journalists who remain in prison for simply doing their jobs and he blasted Al-Jazeera — he is suing the network — for failures and distortions he said led to his imprisonment.

Fahmy, who moved to Canada with his family in 1991, has said he plans to take up a position as an adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia's school of journalism in Vancouver. He is also writing a book about his experiences.

 

Colin Perkel, The Canadian Press

Grande Prairie RCMP looking for suspect in robbery
Ontario allows self-driving cars on provincial roads for testing purposes

WATERLOO, Ont. — Ontario will allow testing of self-driving cars on provincial roads starting next year, but only with a human operator who can take over in case of problems.

The government says the pilot project will allow companies to conduct research and development in Ontario, and help bring automated vehicles to market.

The self-driving vehicles are capable of detecting the surrounding environment using artificial intelligence, sensors and global positioning systems.

The government says automated and connected-vehicle technologies can improve fuel efficiency and help reduce traffic congestion, greenhouse gas emissions and driver distraction.

Toyota announced last week that it hopes to have a self-driving car on the road in Japan by 2020.

 

 

 

 

The Canadian Press

Amanda Lang leaving CBC for another TV opportunity

TORONTO — CBC's senior business correspondent Amanda Lang is leaving the public broadcaster.

Editor-in-Chief Jennifer McGuire says Lang is pursuing "a new opportunity outside the CBC in television" and plans to "devote more time to her writing" with a book expected next year.

Lang joined the CBC in 2009 as one half of "The Lang & O'Leary Exchange," which was renamed "The Exchange with Amanda Lang" after Kevin O'Leary left the show.

Lang was also part of the team bringing business news to "The National."

McGuire announced the departure in a memo to staff Tuesday morning.

"Amanda's two decades of experience as a business reporter furthered our commitment to quality business coverage," McGuire stated.

Her last day with the CBC will be Friday. Business journalist Bruce Sellery will host her show for the next two weeks.

Lang's tenure in recent months was tainted by allegations of impropriety, although a CBC review concluded she abided by journalistic standards.

In early January, media website Canadaland alleged that she tried to "sabotage" a 2013 story about the Royal Bank of Canada and its use of temporary foreign workers.

The report said the bank sponsored some speeches or events at which Lang spoke and that Lang had a "serious relationship" with a bank board member. Lang said she disclosed the relationship to the CBC.

The CBC came to Lang's defence and said her paid speaking appearances were approved and did not violate any rules. However, in late January, the CBC said it would no longer approve any paid appearances by its on-air journalistic employees.

Then in March, the CBC said after a review it had concluded that Lang abided by journalistic standards during her involvement with that 2013 story.

Lang previously worked for various newspapers, including the Globe and Mail and the National Post, and anchored with CNN in New York and the Business News Network.

Lang and McGuire were not immediately available for comment.

The Canadian Press

NewsAlert: Amanda Lang leaving CBC for another TV job

TORONTO — Amanda Lang has left CBC to pursue another opportunity in television, says a memo to staff.

CBC Editor-in-Chief Jennifer McGuire says Lang also plans to "devote more time to her writing" and notes she'll publish a book next fall.

Lang joined CBC in 2009 as one half of "The Lang & O'Leary Exchange," and as part of the team bringing business news to "The National."

More to come.

The Canadian Press

John Gibbons looks to make most of Jays resources in Toronto’s playoff comeback

ARLINGTON, Texas — Down 2-0 in the American League Division Series, Blue Jays manager John Gibbons did not look his normal relaxed self in the visiting manager's office at Globe Life Park.

A persistent hacking chest cold was no doubt responsible for the grey look. But Toronto's predicament wasn't helping. One more slip-up and the Jays' dream season was over.

"It has happened fast," Gibbons acknowledged. "I think a week ago today we were sitting down in Tampa taking the Sports Illustrated (cover) picture."

Two wins later, the series with Texas is even and Toronto can dispatch the Rangers on Wednesday from the comfort of its home stadium.

Gibbons has made some hard decisions along the way in the pressure-filled playoff cauldron where three losses can quickly trump the 93 wins in the regular season.

Prior to Game 3, he was asked whether his first foray into the post-season had proved more challenging than expected.

"I don't know if it's harder than you imagine, it's definitely more intense. I don't know. I can't really answer that yet. I've loved every minute of it but there's definitely a different feel in these games than your normal games," he said.

"But it's still baseball. You still have to execute, you still have to do your thing."

In the leadup to the post-season, Gibbons looked after his players.

He let them celebrate the franchise's long-awaited return to the playoffs. He gave them time off to recover. He handed the ball to veteran LaTroy Hawkins in the game that clinched the AL East title. And in another sign of respect, he gave Mark Buehrle a bonus start in a bid to reach 200 innings pitched for the 15th straight season.

With the season on the line Monday, Gibbons played hardball.

Despite being up 7-1, he pulled R.A. Dickey after he yielded a single with two outs in the fifth, denying the 40-year-old knuckleballer a win in his first-ever post-season start.

He inserted David Price, effectively using up the Game 1 starter in a relief role.

Both players relished the chance to go back to Toronto with the series still alive but neither seemed too chuffed about how they got there.

With Brett Cecil injured and fellow left-hander Aaron Loup unavailable because of a family matter, Gibbons had few southpaw options against a Texas batting order bristling with five lefties.

When he was taken out, Dickey was facing the meat of the Rangers order with left-hander Shin-Soo Choo and Adrian Beltre, who had a combined four hits in the game, with lefties Prince Fielder and Mitch Moreland to follow with Josh Hamilton on deck.

"What we didn't want to happen is a couple guys on base," said Gibbons. "Choo comes up. And R.A. has been known to give up the fly balls, launch it. Maybe if that should happen now they're right back in the game."

Dickey was asked whether he thought the move meant his manager didn't trust the knuckeball.

"I sure hope not," he answered. "I would hate to think that's the case. It feels good when a manager believes in you.

"Today was kind of a precarious situation, you know? It's a do-or-die game, you know. We've got a bazooka (Price) in the bullpen, so you try to see both sides as a diplomat."

Those on Gibbons' side will argue he made the most of his resources, utilizing Price in the form of a flame-retardant in Game 4 while leaving Game 5 in the red-hot, confident hands of Marcus Stroman.

"That's the best part about our team," first baseman Chris Colabello explained. "We don't have to rely on one guy. We don't have to rely on one bat. We don't have to rely on one pitcher. I think that's what has made us special all year." 

"A team win, that's what I was looking for," said Gibbons.

Mission accomplished.  

----

Follow @NeilMDavidson on Twitter

Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press

Panda gives birth to two cubs at Toronto Zoo

TORONTO — The highly anticipated birth of two giant panda cubs at the Toronto Zoo was being hailed Tuesday as a Canadian first.

The zoo said the cubs were born between 3:30 and 3:45 a.m., the first weighing just under 188 grams and the second 115 grams.

Their mother, Er Shun — who is on loan from China along with a male panda named Da Mao — is showing "excellent maternal instincts" and has been given time to bond with each cub as they take turns in an incubator, the zoo said.

All three appear to be doing well, the zoo said, and will be monitored around the clock in the panda maternity ward, which is closed to the public.

"The tiny cubs are very vulnerable at this size, so the next several hours and days will be critical to their survival," the zoo said in a statement.

Giant pandas are born blind and the cubs are pink with short, thin white fur. The cubs are about 1/900th of the size of their mother, making them among the smallest newborn mammals compared to their mother.

Sperm from three different donors — Da Mao and two pandas in China — was used during the one-day fertility window back on May 14, and it's unclear whether the cubs are twins.

"At this time zoo staff do not know the sex of the cubs and have not confirmed which panda is the father. It may be several months before we are able to determine the sex and paternity of the cubs," the zoo said. 

Zoo staff began conducting regular ultrasounds on Er Shun and announced the pregnancy in late September.

The zoo said it's the first time giant pandas have been born in Canada.

Staff have said the cubs, if they survive, will live at the zoo for about two years and will likely return to China once they are weaned from Er Shun.

Er Shun and Da Mao arrived from China in 2013 and are slated to move to the Calgary Zoo in 2018.

 

Paola Loriggio, The Canadian Press

Cristiano Ronaldo receives Golden Boot award as Europe’s top scorer in 2014-15

MADRID — Cristiano Ronaldo received his record fourth Golden Boot award on Tuesday after leading all scorers in Europe's domestic leagues last season.

Ronaldo scored 48 goals in 35 Spanish league games to claim his third Golden Boot playing for Real Madrid. His other award came with Manchester United in 2007-08. No other player has won four.

Ronaldo was accompanied at the gala by his mother, his son, Madrid coach Rafa Benitez, club president Florentino Perez and the Portuguese ambassador to Spain.

The 30-year-old Ronaldo became Madrid's all-time leading scorer on Sept. 30 with 324 goals, surpassing Raul Gonzalez's previous mark.

The Associated Press

High risk accused hearing proceeds for mentally ill dad who killed his children

NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Crown prosecutors will be in B.C. Supreme Court in New Westminster today, seeking to apply a new law on a mentally ill father who killed his three young children.

Allan Schoenborn has been found not criminally responsible on account of a mental disorder for the April, 2008 killings of his 10-year-old daughter and eight and five-year-old sons, at their Merritt, B.C., home.

He has been held in a forensic psychiatric facility since then, eligible for yearly detention reviews, and recently granted escorted day passes, despite the opposition of the victims' mother.

The new law, Bill C-14, establishes the designation of "high risk accused," indefinitely halting any absence from a mental facility and extending the review period to once every three years.

In a radio ad released Thursday, Conservative Leader Stephen Harper refers to what it calls the tragic story of Schoenborn, stating that public safety is key in handling such criminals.

The ad angers mental health experts who say it criminalizes the mentally ill, while Schoenborn's lawyer calls Harper's ad prejudicial in advance of the hearing.

The Canadian Press

Four stories in the news today, Oct. 13

Four stories in the news today, Oct. 13 from The Canadian Press:

———

MAIN PARTY LEADERS IN ONTARIO

The major party leaders are all in vote-rich southern Ontario today as the federal election campaign enters its final days. Prime Minister Stephen Harper will visit the Etobicoke-Lakeshore riding where former Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff lost his seat in 2011. Harper will also visit London, Ont. NDP Leader Tom Mulcair will visit Oshawa, Toronto and Brampton. Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau starts off in Toronto before heading to Kitchener and Mannheim, Ont..

———

MOHAMED FAHMY SET TO MEET THE PRESS IN TORONTO

Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy plans to attend a news conference hosted by Canadian Journalists for Free Expression today at Ryerson University in Toronto. The former Al-Jazeera journalist, who was arrested in Egypt in 2013 with two colleagues and detained on terror-related charges, arrived in Toronto on Sunday.

———

OPENING STATEMENTS TODAY IN TORONTO POLICE TRIAL

Opening statements are expected today in the trial of a Toronto police officer charged in connection with the shooting death of a teenager on a streetcar two years ago. Const. James Forcillo is charged with second-degree murder and attempted murder in the death of 18-year-old Sammy Yatim. Forcillo has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him.

———

THREE FORMALLY CHARGED IN KILLING OF QUEBEC WOMAN IN CALIFORNIA

An arraignment has been scheduled for Wednesday for three young transients accused of killing a 23-year-old Quebec woman in San  francisco and a yoga instructor who was walking his dog just north of the city. The suspects were arrested last week in Oregon and arrived in California Monday evening. Police have said the body of Audrey Carey of Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., was discovered in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park the morning of Oct. 3 and that she had been shot once in the head.

———

ALSO IN THE NEWS TODAY ...

— Hearing related to B.C. Criminal Justice Branch seeking "high-risk" offender designation for Allan Schoenborn, found not criminally responsible for killing his three children while suffering psychosis in April 2008.

— The fall sitting of the Saskatchewan legislature begins.

 

The Canadian Press

Experts urge Canadians to take part in earthquake drill Oct. 15

MONTREAL — Get ready for the Great Shakeout.

On Thursday, drills in British Columbia and Quebec will provide people with the opportunity to learn how to be safer during earthquakes.

B.C. organizers say 750,000 people have registered for that province's  event, which will see participants drop to the ground at 10:15 a.m. local time, take cover by getting under a table or desk and hold on for about 60 to 90 seconds.

The exercise, which happens yearly on the third Thursday in October, was first held in British Columbia in 2011.

Alison Bird, a seismologist with Natural Resources Canada, is urging Canadians to take steps to prepare for an earthquake  — not just in southwestern B.C. where there's a high risk  — but across the country.

Bird says some groups in Ontario will also be doing the drill, but it is not provincewide.  

She stresses the worst thing a person can do is to run through a building when a quake hits.

"When you're in a stressful situation your brain is not functioning properly so your body wants to do the instinctive thing, which is to run," she said, adding that the most dangerous place to be is just around the outside of a building.

Bird says people need to be taught to drop, find cover and hold on if an earthquake hits.

"It's really important to create that muscle memory so that you do the right thing in an earthquake," she said.  

Over the centuries, earthquakes in Canada have claimed at least 30 lives, with most of them victims of a tsunami that hit Newfoundland in 1929.

People living on Moresby Island, off the B.C. mainland, have been coping with their share of earthquakes over the years.

Bill Beldessi, the director of Moresby Island regional district, remembers the 2012 quake in the Haida Gwaii region that measured 7.8 on the Richter scale.

"It was probably one of the worst one since I've lived here," he said in an interview from Sandspit, B.C.

"I was in bed and I noticed the light fixtures started making noises and a few things dropped off the wall and then a couple of aftershocks happened within five minutes."

Beldessi, 66, says everyone headed for higher ground.

That threat of massive tidal waves also prompted the community to pull together and set up an emergency centre.

"That's what we're doing right now,'' he said. ''We have a tsunami centre up in the hills and it's full stocked.

"As far as the big one, who knows when it's going to come — we don't lay awake worrying about it.

"We constantly have earth tremors here so it's not a big deal when we get something around three-and-a half or (magnitude) four. It's normal."

Bird says people living in Victoria have a one-in-three chance of experiencing a damaging earthquake over the next 50 years.

For Vancouver, there's a one-in-five chance.   

The danger is lower in the B.C. Interior, but Bird cautions ''there's nowhere that has zero hazard for earthquakes."

The hazard decreases further inland and while provinces like Saskatchewan and Manitoba can experience quakes, the threat there is low.

Bird says there are approximately 4,000 earthquakes a year in the West and about another 2,000 in the East.

"So it's a very active country for earthquakes. . . we really have to try to get people to recognize that that's the case."

Her colleague, Maurice Lamontagne, who monitors Eastern Canada, says there are three active seismic zones in Quebec.

He says 60 earthquakes are registered yearly in the west Quebec region, which includes the Laurentians, Montreal, Ottawa and eastern Ontario. 

Another seismic zone is the Charlevoix region northeast of Quebec City where two children died in an 1866 quake.

The third seismic zone in Quebec is the Lower St-Lawrence region and Lamontagne says it's mainly under the river that the 60 yearly quakes are produced.

The seismologist adds that neighbouring New Brunswick has had its share of quakes and continues to register small ones.

Lamontagne warns there could be a repeat of the 7.2 earthquake off the Grand Banks of Newfoundland that was followed by a tsunami. It killed 28 people as waves carried away several villages in the Burin Peninsula.

"Absolutely!, there could be earthquakes that could cause tsunamis like that one," he said in an interview.

 

 

     

 

   

 

Peter Rakobowchuk, The Canadian Press

MEC evolving mission with move to Alpine skiing and snowboarding

MONTREAL — Sporting goods retailer MEC is getting into resort-style Alpine skiing as it continues to move away from its original mission of only targeting self-propelled wilderness activities.

The company has long supported backcountry and cross-country skiing but is shifting gear even though downhill skiing and snowboarding relies on mechanical lifts to take people to the top of hills.

"We're not going to go to the dark side at all," CEO David Labistour said from its headquarters in Vancouver in a recent interview.

Since 2012, the company has evolved its approach to helping people lead active outdoor lifestyles and has instead adopting a non-motorized policy.

"Skiing is a healthy, family-oriented activity that we believe fits in line with what we stand for."

The co-operative, founded in 1971, will begin selling equipment along with ski clothing beginning Tuesday at four of its 18 Canadian stores, and online. Skiing enthusiasts will be able to purchase downhill and boarding gear at the Montreal Marche central store, at Toronto's King Street store and in Ottawa and Calgary.

The program will be rolled out to other locations as early as next year if results prove successful.

Mountain Equipment Co-op has traditionally been stronger in Western Canada, catering to pursuits like backcountry skiing in the Rockies. Nearly half its sales come from B.C. and Alberta.

Ontario, meantime, contributes 27 per cent and Quebec 15 per cent. Its 4.5 million members are expected to spend $350 million in its stores this year.

Adding downhill sports is aimed at serving a popular winter activity in central and eastern Canada.

"From those with a Western perspective, we think the mountains are in the West, but actually the ski visits in the east are significant," Labistour said.

Canada is the world's seventh-largest ski nation with an estimated 2.5 million Canadians who ski or snowboard each year at some 279 hills across the country, according to the Canadian Ski Council.

MEC will sell equipment brand names that include Salomon, Rossignol, Vokl, Marker and Dalbello. Clothing will be available from Helly Hansen, Outdoor Research and Burton, in addition to its own MEC brand.

The move comes a few years after MEC added standup paddleboards and equipment for yoga, cycling and running.

As part of its new skiing focus, MEC is partnering with winter athletes Mark Sollors and Roz Groenewoud to raise awareness of climate change by donating up to $10,000 to the Protect Our Winters non-profit.

MEC's entry into Alpine sports may have an impact on other high-end retailers, but not those that cater to deal-conscious families that represent the largest segment of buyers, said Lee Brosseau, assistant manager of Andre Jac Sport in Laval, Que.

"If people are going there for high-end stuff, those are great skiers. Those are people who have got years of experience and they are looking for a high-end ski to match their experience," he said in an interview.

— Follow @RossMarowits on Twitter.

Ross Marowits, The Canadian Press

Trio charged with killing Quebecer, hiker, in California

SAN FRANCISCO — An arraignment has been scheduled for Wednesday for three young transients accused of killing a 23-year-old Quebec woman in San Francisco and a yoga instructor who was walking his dog just north of the city.

The Marin County Sheriff's Office said the three suspects who were arrested last week in Oregon arrived in California on Monday evening and were taken to a county jail.

Marin County District Attorney Ed Berberian said the suspects — 24-year-old Sean Michael Angold, 23-year-old Morrison Haze Lampley and 18-year-old Lila Scott Alligood — are each charged with two counts of murder with special circumstances, including lying in wait.

Police said the body of Audrey Carey of Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., was discovered in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park the morning of Oct. 3 and that she had been shot once in the head.

Investigators believe Carey was camping in the park, which was hosting a free, three-day bluegrass festival.

Tantric yoga instructor Steve Carter, 67, was found dead two days later along a popular hiking trail about 32 kilometres north of San Francisco. He was still clutching the leash of his dog, which as also shot, but is expected to survive.

San Francisco Police Commander Toney Chaplin said the same gun was used in both killings.

Carey — who had embarked on a backpacking trip in the U.S. and Europe — has been described by her family as someone who was full of life and loved by all.

Carter lived near the hiking trail where he was shot and drove there to walk his dog. He was living with friends while caring for his wife, who has cancer.

— With files from The Associated Press

 

The Associated Press

Mohamed Fahmy back in Canada; will speak to media today

TORONTO — Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy plans to attend a news conference hosted by Canadian Journalists for Free Expression today at Ryerson University in Toronto.

The former Al-Jazeera journalist, who was arrested in Egypt in 2013 with two colleagues and detained on terror-related charges, arrived in Toronto on Sunday.

Fahmy was sentenced to three years in prison in a widely-condemned retrial this year for airing what a court described as "false news'' and coverage biased in favour of the now-banned Muslim Brotherhood.

He and his Egyptian co-defendant received a pardon last month while colleague Peter Greste of Australia was released earlier.

Fahmy — who has criticized Prime Minister Stephen Harper for not doing enough to get him back to Canada — said he made sure to come back to Canada amid the campaign because he feels it his responsibility to start a debate on the issue.

Fahmy met with Justin Trudeau on Monday night and tweeted that he and his wife "enjoyed meeting the tireless & inspirational" Liberal leader to "express gratitude for his support.

Fahmy also plans to meet with NDP Tom Mulcair but said he has no plans to endorse a candidate in the federal election.

The freed journalist also tweeted Monday that he is "excited to speak at Ryerson tomorrow 11am to thank those who supported me & highlight what Ottawa can do to better protect fellow Canadians."

Fahmy, who moved to Canada with his family in 1991, has said he plans to take up a position as an adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia's school of journalism in Vancouver. He is also writing a book about his experiences.

— With files from The Associated Press.

 

The Canadian Press

Opening statement’s today in trial of Toronto cop charged in Yatim death

TORONTO — Opening statements are expected today in the trial of a Toronto police officer charged in connection with the shooting death of a teenager on a streetcar two years ago.

Const. James Forcillo is charged with second-degree murder and attempted murder in the death of 18-year-old Sammy Yatim.

Forcillo has pleaded not guilty to the charges against him.

Yatim was shot and killed on an empty streetcar on July 27, 2013 — an incident captured on surveillance and cellphone video on which nine shots can be heard following shouted commands to drop a knife.

Forcillo, who has been free on bail, has been working at Toronto Crimestoppers in an administrative role.

His lawyer has said his client is eager to tell his side of the story at trial.

The Canadian Press

California lawmakers do what Major League Baseball couldn’t accomplish, ban tobacco chewing

LOS ANGELES — California lawmakers have taken the first step toward accomplishing something Major League Baseball could never do: Stop players from stuffing those big wads of chewing tobacco into their mouths during games.

With Gov. Jerry Brown signing a bill earlier this week banning the use of smokeless tobacco in all California ballparks, the practice now seems headed toward the sport's endangered species list.

California has five of Major League teams and owners themselves have been pressing for a ban for years. Last May they got one in San Francisco. In August they got another in Boston. And when Brown signed Assembly Bill 768 on Sunday one was already in the works for Los Angeles.

Major League Baseball still needs buy-in from the players, however, because the statewide ban that takes effect before next season has no provision for enforcement.

John Rogers, The Associated Press

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