Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man arrested in Montreal on terrorism-related charge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Dec, 2014 11:50 AM

    MONTREAL — A Montreal man is facing a terrorism-related charge after police were tipped off by his family that he had recently become radicalized.

    Montreal police spokesman Ian Lafreniere says authorities searched his apartment on Friday and found a city map that showed the co-ordinates of four different police stations.

    The 21-year-old man is scheduled to appear in court this afternoon.

    Lafreniere says no direct threats were made.

    He called the arrest a "preventive" measure.

    Montreal police officers have been told to be vigilant in the wake of the shooting deaths of three officers in the United States on the weekend.

    "It is a 21-year-old who was apprehended," Lafreniere said in an interview. "We got a flag that was raised by relatives of the suspect, saying, you know what, he's not doing well, he's getting radicalized to violence."

    The man is charged under a Criminal Code provision that allows for the arrest of someone who "commits an act that, in all the circumstances, is likely to cause a reasonable apprehension that terrorist activity is occurring or will occur, without believing that such activity is occurring or will occur."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne touts good-jobs goal at work summit

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne touts good-jobs goal at work summit
    TORONTO - Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says her government shares the labour movement's goal of creating good jobs, while cautioning the two sides may have some differences of opinion about how to get there.

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne touts good-jobs goal at work summit

    Former insurance CEO returns money from contract

    Former insurance CEO returns money from contract
    WINNIPEG - Manitoba Public Insurance says its former CEO has returned money she received from a "transitional contract" she signed earlier this year.

    Former insurance CEO returns money from contract

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour
    WINNIPEG - A man who was himself mauled when he saved a woman attacked by a polar bear has received one of Manitoba's highest honours.

    Churchill Man who saved woman from polar bear gets Manitoba's highest honour

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad
    New Democrats and Liberals refused Friday to support Harper's decision to join in airstrikes against the extremist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which has been committing atrocities in northern Iraq.

    No cover for PM Stephen Harper if Iraq mission goes bad

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself
    VICTORIA - The allegations were serious, a stern-faced British Columbia health minister announcing that seven employees had been fired and the RCMP had been called in to investigate a collection of data breaches.

    B.C. Government Apologizes For Firing Co-op Student Who Killed Himself

    Brain-damaged B.C. Man Alleges RCMP Officer Who Assaulted Him Was On Steroids

    Brain-damaged B.C. Man Alleges RCMP Officer Who Assaulted Him Was On Steroids
    VANCOUVER - A British Columbia man has filed a lawsuit alleging he sustained permanent brain damage at the hands of an RCMP officer whose violence was fuelled by steroids.

    Brain-damaged B.C. Man Alleges RCMP Officer Who Assaulted Him Was On Steroids