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Liquor & Lotteries dropping Air Miles

By Kevin Rollason 3 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

WINNIPEG — Buying a bottle of booze at a Liquor Mart will soon get you no closer to paying for a vacation.

Manitoba Liquor & Lotteries Corp. announced it is flying away from being part of the Air Miles program, after almost 30 years of helping its eligible customers rack up reward points.

“We are exploring what other loyalty programs are available and whether they would be a fit for Manitoba Liquor Marts,” an MLL spokesperson said on Wednesday.

“We’ll follow our usual procurement process if we decide to engage with a new provider. Until then, Manitobans can expect to continue receiving the superior service and experiences that Liquor Marts are known for.”

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Suzanne Morrison, the mother of Matthew Perry, walks into court with her husband Keith Morrison before Jasveen Sangha, who pleaded guilty to selling Perry a lethal dose of the drug ketamine in the days before his death, appears in court for sentencing in Los Angeles on Wednesday. (The Associated Press)

Suzanne Morrison, the mother of Matthew Perry, walks into court with her husband Keith Morrison before Jasveen Sangha, who pleaded guilty to selling Perry a lethal dose of the drug ketamine in the days before his death, appears in court for sentencing in Los Angeles on Wednesday. (The Associated Press)

‘Ketamine Queen’ gets 15 years in prison

By Andrew Dalton 5 minute read Preview

‘Ketamine Queen’ gets 15 years in prison

By Andrew Dalton 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

LOS ANGELES — A federal judge on Wednesday handed down a sentence of 15 years in prison to a woman who pleaded guilty to selling actor Matthew Perry the ketamine that killed him in 2023.

“You’re going to have to show some epic resilience,” Judge Sherilyn Peace Garnett said to Jasveen Sangha, echoing the defendant’s words earlier in the hearing about her self-improvement.

Citing the unique role Sangha admitted to playing in Perry’s death and her broader drug-dealing business, the judge gave the 42-year-old a sentence that will almost certainly be more than all four of her co-defendants combined.

The hearing Wednesday in a Los Angeles courtroom was in many ways the pinnacle of the two-and-a-half-year investigation and prosecution that followed the overdose death of the 54-year-old actor, whose role as Chandler Bing on NBC’s “Friends” in the 1990s and 2000s made him one of the biggest television stars of the era.

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Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

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Ottawa releases another $51 million in aid for Ukraine

3 minute read Saturday, Apr. 4, 2026

OTTAWA — The federal Liberal government unveiled another $51 million in aid and reconstruction funding for Ukraine on Friday, including humanitarian aid such as food and shelter and supports for recent veterans who fought against Russia’s invasion.

The new measures come from a broader fund outlined in the 2025 budget, and $32 million of the money will go toward humanitarian aid through outside organizations, including the Red Cross, the United Nations Refugee Agency and the World Food Programme.

Another $5 million has been earmarked for programming to help veterans reintegrate into society.

Randeep Sarai, secretary of state for international development, said in a phone interview from the Kyiv Post newspaper office that Canada signed a memorandum of understanding with Ukraine a few years back on providing technical assistance to veterans.

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WINNIPEG — Lawyers for a man who alleged he was repeatedly sexually assaulted as a child by a now-dead Catholic priest in rural Manitoba and Winnipeg in a 2023 lawsuit recently reached a confidential settlement with the Archdiocese of St. Boniface.

Terms of the settlement, which was reached in the fall after a private judicially assisted dispute resolution in front of a Court of King’s Bench justice in September, are not included in public court records reviewed by the Free Press.

The lawsuit, which was filed in June 2023 and named the archdiocese and archbishop as defendants, was officially discontinued in November.

The plaintiff, now in his early 60s, claimed the alleged abuse began when he was eight-years-old in 1972 and lasted until 1982.

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Police arrest a protester dressed as the Statue of Liberty, in downtown Los Angeles after the “No Kings” rally on Saturday. (The Associated Press)

Police arrest a protester dressed as the Statue of Liberty, in downtown Los Angeles after the “No Kings” rally on Saturday. (The Associated Press)

Dozens arrested after ‘No Kings’ rally in L.A.

By John Raby 3 minute read Preview

Dozens arrested after ‘No Kings’ rally in L.A.

By John Raby 3 minute read Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

Authorities in Los Angeles deployed tear gas near a federal detention centre and made dozens of arrests following one of thousands of “No Kings” rallies held this weekend across the United States and in Europe to protest President Donald Trump’s actions and the war in Iran.

Los Angeles police said Sunday that 74 people were arrested for failing to heed a dispersal order that was given after Saturday’s rally ended. One other person was taken into custody on suspicion of possessing a weapon that police described as a dagger.

The arrests stood out from what otherwise were mostly peaceful protests. Organizers said there were more than 3,100 events registered in all 50 U.S. states.

As hundreds of protesters surrounded a federal complex in downtown Los Angeles, some threw rocks, bottles and broken concrete blocks at officers, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said in a statement late Saturday night.

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Monday, Mar. 30, 2026

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Advocacy groups call for inquest after plasma donor deaths

By Malak Abas 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 14, 2026

WINNIPEG — The provincial government is being urged to call an inquest into the deaths of two people who had donated plasma at for-profit collection centres in Winnipeg.

Health Canada has promised to investigate the deaths, which occurred in October and January at two Grifols Plasma Donation Centres in Winnipeg.

However, the Manitoba Health Coalition said Health Canada licenses Grifols and it has a conflict of interest.

“We want as independent and (thorough) an investigation as possible for the loved ones of these Manitobans who died, to get real answers and so that harm like this doesn’t happen in the future,” coalition executive director Noah Schulz said at a news conference Friday.

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Province will take month to consider gas-tax cut

By Tyler Searle 2 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

WINNIPEG — Manitoba will spend the next month mulling a potential cut to the provincial gas tax, as fuel prices soar amid an ongoing conflict between the U.S. and Iran.

The decision could hinge on the outcome of a scheduled two-week ceasefire between the warring countries, which is expected to influence prices, Premier Wab Kinew said Thursday.

”Over the next month, we’re going to watch the price of oil, and if gas prices stay high for a long time, we may reduce the gas tax,” Kinew said in a statement.

“We should see within the next month if this ceasefire actually leads to prices going closer to normal.”

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Premier targets Khan over Asagwara remark

By Chris Kitching 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

WINNIPEG — Premier Wab Kinew accused Tory Leader Obby Khan on Thursday of failing to acknowledge and take responsibility for a “dehumanizing” and “hateful” comment toward Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara, who is non-binary.

Kinew and Khan, who denied making a hateful remark in the legislature last month, faced off for the first time in question period since Speaker Tom Lindsey reviewed audio recordings and reprimanded the Progressive Conservative leader Tuesday.

“He had the opportunity to accept responsibility for his hate spewing here in the chamber against a queer person,” Kinew said of Khan in response to a question from PC MLA Josh Guenter.

“And then (Khan) has the temerity, he has the audacity, he has the nerve to come in here and to try and invoke vulnerable Manitobans just so that he won’t have to face the wrath of an enraged, rightfully so I would say, government. You deserve to wallow in the shame that is your life.”

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Bobbi Taillefer is no longer the province’s commissioner of teacher professional conduct. Her resignation comes after questions were raised about her working remotely in Florida over the winter. (Ruth Bonneville/Winnipeg Free Press files)

Bobbi Taillefer is no longer the province’s commissioner of teacher professional conduct. Her resignation comes after questions were raised about her working remotely in Florida over the winter. (Ruth Bonneville/Winnipeg Free Press files)

Taillefer resigns as teacher conduct commissioner

By Jeff Hamilton 6 minute read Preview

Taillefer resigns as teacher conduct commissioner

By Jeff Hamilton 6 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

WINNIPEG — The head of Manitoba’s year-old teacher misconduct registry has abruptly resigned after questions were raised about her working remotely in Florida over the winter.

Education Minister Tracy Schmidt confirmed Thursday that Bobbi Taillefer is no longer the commissioner of teacher professional conduct. The resignation comes just two weeks after the government was informed by the Winnipeg Free Press about Taillefer’s out-of-country work arrangement.

“I became aware at the same time you did,” Schmidt said, admitting she was entirely unaware of the commissioner’s whereabouts until confronted with the allegations. “Bobbi Taillefer has resigned as the commissioner and is no longer acting as the commissioner for the registry here in Manitoba.”

The sudden gap in leadership leaves the handling of ongoing and highly sensitive investigations into teacher misconduct in question. However, Schmidt insisted Thursday that there would be “absolutely no interruption in service,” noting that a team of investigators remains in office and an active search for an interim commissioner is underway.

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Family members of the victims react as they listen Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond A. Tierney during a news conference after Rex Heuermann, accused in Long Island’s infamous Gilgo Beach serial killings, pleaded guilty on Wednesday at Suffolk County Police Academy Gymnasium in Brentwood, N.Y. (The Associated Press)

Family members of the victims react as they listen Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond A. Tierney during a news conference after Rex Heuermann, accused in Long Island’s infamous Gilgo Beach serial killings, pleaded guilty on Wednesday at Suffolk County Police Academy Gymnasium in Brentwood, N.Y. (The Associated Press)

Rex Heuermann admits he killed 8 women

By Michael R. Sisak 6 minute read Preview

Rex Heuermann admits he killed 8 women

By Michael R. Sisak 6 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

RIVERHEAD, N.Y. — A Long Island architect who led a secret life as a serial killer pleaded guilty on Wednesday to murdering seven women and admitted he killed an eighth in a string of long-unsolved crimes known as the Gilgo Beach killings.

Rex Heuermann, 62, entered the pleas in a courtroom packed with reporters, police and victims’ relatives, some of whom wept as he detailed his murders.

He will be sentenced in June to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Heuermann’s guilty pleas — to three counts of first-degree murder and four of intentional murder — bring finality to a case that bedeviled investigators, tormented victims’ families and tantalized a true-crime obsessed public for years.

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Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

Local

3 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

HAVANA — Hundreds of Cuban women gathered Tuesday in Havana to decry a U.S. energy embargo and other measures imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump that are strangling the Caribbean island.

The rally was organized by the Federation of Cuban Women, a massive organization with close ties to the government and the Communist Party, to honour the late Vilma Espín, the federation’s founder, a guerrilla fighter and former president Raúl Castro’s wife.

The crowd that gathered at a park commemorating a 19th-century independence patriot waved Cuban flags, held signs that read “Down with the Blockade” and clutched pictures of Fidel Castro and Espín.

Deputy Prime Minister Inés María Chapman and Deputy Foreign Minister Josefina Vidal led the demonstration along with Mariela Castro, daughter of Espín and Raúl Castro.

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Indigenous protesters march during the annual “Acampamento Terra Livre,” or Free Land Encampment, Brazil’s largest annual Indigenous mobilization that focuses on land rights and environmental protection, in the capital, Brasilia, on Tuesday. (The Associated Press)

Indigenous protesters march during the annual “Acampamento Terra Livre,” or Free Land Encampment, Brazil’s largest annual Indigenous mobilization that focuses on land rights and environmental protection, in the capital, Brasilia, on Tuesday. (The Associated Press)

Brazilian Indigenous leaders rally over land rights

By Gabriela Sá Pessoa 5 minute read Preview

Brazilian Indigenous leaders rally over land rights

By Gabriela Sá Pessoa 5 minute read Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

BRASILIA — Thousands of Indigenous people marched in Brazil’s capital on Tuesday to protest what they say are violations of their land rights by large corporations advancing farming, logging and mining projects.

Indigenous leaders also sought to apply pressure on President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who has supported Indigenous rights and environmental stewardship in Latin America’s largest nation while also pushing oil and other projects that appear to go against those aims. The leftist leader is expected to run for re-election in October.

Protesters walked along the Esplanade of the Ministries toward Three Powers Square, home to the presidential palace, Congress and the Supreme Court. The demonstration was part of the annual Free Land Encampment, now in its 22nd edition.

Free Land is Brazil’s largest Indigenous mobilization, bringing together about 7,000 Indigenous people from 200 groups from across the country who camp in Brasilia for a week to press for unified demands. This year’s gathering comes amid rising reports of violent attacks against the Pataxo people in Bahia state amid a land dispute with farmers, and significant protests in the Amazon region in recent months.

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Wednesday, Apr. 8, 2026

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