Sunday, March 29, 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

Bank of Canada lowers key interest rate but signals cuts may be done

Bank of Canada lowers key interest rate but signals cuts may be done
The Bank of Canada cut its benchmark interest rate by a quarter point Wednesday and signalled it may be satisfied with where the policy rate sits amid ongoing U.S. trade uncertainty.

Bank of Canada lowers key interest rate but signals cuts may be done

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP
Ontario Provincial Police say a British Columbia man has been arrested in a historic sexual assault investigation spanning nearly three decades and involving four alleged victims, three of whom were teens at the time.

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment
Former Conservative senator Don Meredith was found not guilty on all counts in an Ottawa courtroom this morning.

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president
Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump pointed and smiled at one another as they sat down to dinner together in South Korea on Wednesday - their first in-person interaction since Trump abruptly ended trade talks last week.

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures
A former deputy premier of Alberta says the success of a petition he circulated to make it official policy for the province to stay in Canada should signal to Premier Danielle Smith that she needs to put separatism to bed.

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting
British Columbia Attorney General Niki Sharma says the provincial government's argument in the landmark Cowichan Tribes land case was that Aboriginal and fee-simple title "cannot co-exist" on the same land in their full form.

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting