Tuesday, May 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Police Say 43 'Modern Day Slaves' From Mexico Forced To Clean Ontario Resorts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2019 09:24 PM

    BARRIE, Ont. — Police say they have freed 43 "modern day slaves" from Mexico who were allegedly forced to work as cleaners at a hotel and vacation properties in central and eastern Ontario.

     

    Officers with the Ontario Provincial Police and Barrie police began investigating the alleged scam last year, culminating in 12 search warrants that they executed last week.


    OPP Deputy Commissioner Rick Barnum says the alleged victims were lured to Canada believing they would be offered legitimate employment and educational opportunities.


    He says they were instead forced to live in "squalid" conditions and made to pay their alleged traffickers large sums of money.


    After paying various fees to their employers, Barnum says the alleged victims would sometimes make as little as $50 per month for daily work.


    There's no word on criminal charges, but Barnum says they may come later.


    Police say they are keeping close track of two people who were running the company that employed the foreign workers as the investigation continues.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge

    Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge
    Police in Medicine Hat say that when the business called them last week about the money, they arrested the man and searched his backpack.

    Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge

    Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto

    Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto
    Two men rescued from rapidly rising waters in an elevator that flooded during an intense rainstorm in Toronto said focusing on family and faith kept them going as they grappled with the fact that they could be moments away from death.

    Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto

    Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.

    Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.
    BURNS LAKE, B.C. — The latest weather forecast in British Columbia calls for a cooling trend, but provincial firefighting officials say they are bracing for the cold front to bring intense lightning capable of igniting more forest fires.

    Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.

    Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm

    Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm
    The kingdom has also cancelled new trading with Canada, rescinded student scholarships and recalled thousands of Saudi students studying in Canada and barred Canadian wheat imports.

    Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm

    N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic

    N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic
     A 43-year-old New Brunswick man has died after being stung by a wasp, although his family says he had not previously displayed signs of an allergy.

    N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic

    John A. Macdonald Statue 'Painful Reminder' Of Colonialism: Victoria, B.C. Mayor

    John A. Macdonald Statue 'Painful Reminder' Of Colonialism: Victoria, B.C. Mayor
    The mayor of Victoria says a statue of Prime Minister John A. MacDonald will be removed from the front entrance to city hall as a gesture of reconciliation with First Nations.

    John A. Macdonald Statue 'Painful Reminder' Of Colonialism: Victoria, B.C. Mayor