Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Corey Hurren case put over to November

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2020 05:58 PM
  • Corey Hurren case put over to November

A man accused of roaming while heavily armed near the residences of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Governor General this summer will be back in court next month.

Corey Hurren made a brief, virtual court appearance on Friday morning to learn he would have another hearing on Nov. 6.

Before that, his lawyers and Crown attorneys are to have a pretrial meeting scheduled near the end of the month.

The court also heard that Hurren is supposed to meet with his lawyers in the interim.

The Manitoba man faces 21 weapons charges as well as one of threatening the prime minister following an incident on July 2 at Rideau Hall, which is the official residence of the Governor General.

None of the charges has been tested in court.

Police said the military reservist and sausage-maker was heavily armed when he used a pickup truck to break through a side gate at Rideau Hall and headed toward a residence on the grounds where Trudeau and his family also live.

Neither the Trudeaus nor Gov. Gen. Julie Payette were on the grounds at the time of the incident.

Police said several guns and an illegal magazine were found in Hurren's truck after he was peacefully arrested.

MORE National ARTICLES

Missing South Asian senior 88 year old man found dead in a wooded area in Delta

Missing South Asian senior 88 year old man found dead in a wooded area in Delta
Missing South Asian senior 88 year old Jarnail Sanghera who was last on May 15th found dead Sunday Night. According to Delta police in the tweet below his body was found in a wooded aread off Swenson & Nordel way. 

Missing South Asian senior 88 year old man found dead in a wooded area in Delta

Liberal offer on sick leave good start, but action needed: NDP

Liberal offer on sick leave good start, but action needed: NDP
Jagmeet Singh says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's promise to work with provinces to give workers paid sick leave is a good start, but more action is needed before federal New Democrats will agree to suspend full sittings of the House of Commons through the summer.

Liberal offer on sick leave good start, but action needed: NDP

Gathering limits make it a 'great time to be building a pipeline:' Alberta minister

Gathering limits make it a 'great time to be building a pipeline:' Alberta minister
Alberta's energy minister says it's a good time to build a pipeline because public health restrictions limit protests against them.

Gathering limits make it a 'great time to be building a pipeline:' Alberta minister

Trudeau, Singh pressed on parties' decisions to access COVID-19 wage subsidy

Trudeau, Singh pressed on parties' decisions to access COVID-19 wage subsidy
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faced multiple questions Monday on why his party applied for a federal wage subsidy program for organizations facing economic hardship due to COVID-19.

Trudeau, Singh pressed on parties' decisions to access COVID-19 wage subsidy

Guy Laliberte wants to buy back Cirque du soleil, keep headquarters in Montreal

Guy Laliberte wants to buy back Cirque du soleil, keep headquarters in Montreal
Cirque du soleil founder Guy Laliberte says he wants to buy back the internationally celebrated circus company he created more than 35 years ago.

Guy Laliberte wants to buy back Cirque du soleil, keep headquarters in Montreal

N.S. RCMP use warrants to find killer's cellphone, computer and other devices

N.S. RCMP use warrants to find killer's cellphone, computer and other devices
As police continue their investigation into a mass killing that claimed 22 lives last month in rural Nova Scotia, newly released documents reveal the RCMP recently seized and searched the killer's computer, cellphone, tablet and navigation devices.

N.S. RCMP use warrants to find killer's cellphone, computer and other devices