Monday, March 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada denied Jeffrey Epstein permission to visit B.C. in 2018: documents

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jan, 2026 09:52 AM
  • Canada denied Jeffrey Epstein permission to visit B.C. in 2018: documents

The Canadian government denied convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein permission to enter the country in 2018 due to his criminal past, newly released U.S. government documents reveal.

On Friday, the U.S. Justice Department released some 3.5 million pages of documents related to Epstein which include correspondence from his personal email address with the Canadian government.

Despite his criminal record, Epstein contacted the Canadian consulate in Los Angeles seeking a temporary resident permit for a planned trip to Vancouver from April 11 to 13 in 2018 so he could attend a TED conference there.

The Consulate General of Canada in Los Angeles wrote back on April 4 that year to tell that his application was rejected after a "careful and sympathetic review."

The letter informed Epstein he was inadmissible because he was convicted of a crime considered an indictable offence in Canada, and that Ottawa only makes exceptions in circumstances that "might be best described as humanitarian and compassionate."

The documents were disclosed under a law U.S. President Donald Trump enacted in response to mounting public pressure that compels the U.S. government to release information it collected on the disgraced financier.

Picture Courtesy: New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP

MORE National ARTICLES

Those in Canada with loved ones in Middle East hopeful about Hamas-Israel peace plan

Those in Canada with loved ones in Middle East hopeful about Hamas-Israel peace plan
Israel and Hamas have agreed to a first phase of a plan that will see Hamas release the 20 living hostages while Israel pulls troops back to an agreed-upon line.

Those in Canada with loved ones in Middle East hopeful about Hamas-Israel peace plan

Senate debates bill to add warning labels to alcohol packaging

Senate debates bill to add warning labels to alcohol packaging
The Senate is studying a bill that proposes adding cancer warning labels to alcohol packaging.

Senate debates bill to add warning labels to alcohol packaging

B.C. government experts including engineers, foresters expand strike provincewide

B.C. government experts including engineers, foresters expand strike provincewide
The union representing British Columbia's professionals, including engineers, foresters and geoscientists, says those members have joined public service workers in strike action across the province.

B.C. government experts including engineers, foresters expand strike provincewide

Labour expert questions why Alberta government delayed lockout of teachers

Labour expert questions why Alberta government delayed lockout of teachers
As an Alberta-wide teachers strike drags into its fourth day, a labour relations expert doesn't see why the group in charge of bargaining delayed their lockout.

Labour expert questions why Alberta government delayed lockout of teachers

Influencers — not news outlets or politicians — 'dominated' election online: report

Influencers — not news outlets or politicians — 'dominated' election online: report
The report from the Canadian Digital Media Research Network, co-ordinated by the McGill University and University of Toronto-led Media Ecosystem Observatory, looked at the election information environment.

Influencers — not news outlets or politicians — 'dominated' election online: report

Quebec government tables draft constitution that will be 'law of all laws'

François Legault says the Quebec constitution will be "the law of all laws" and reinforce the province's autonomy. 

Quebec government tables draft constitution that will be 'law of all laws'