Sunday, May 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court of Canada to hear Churchill portrait thief's sentence appeal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Apr, 2026 09:11 AM
  • Supreme Court of Canada to hear Churchill portrait thief's sentence appeal

The man who stole the "Roaring Lion" portrait of Winston Churchill from the Château Laurier in Ottawa will have a chance to appeal his sentence in the Supreme Court of Canada.

The famous image was snapped by photographer Yousuf Karsh during Churchill's wartime visit to the Canadian Parliament in December 1941.

Jeffrey Wood stole the portrait in January 2022, replaced it with a cheap copy and sold the original through a London auction house.

The print was returned to public display at the Ottawa hotel with help from authorities in the United Kingdom and Italy.

Wood was sentenced in May 2025 to two years less a day in jail after pleading guilty to the theft.

The Ontario Court of Appeal dismissed his sentence appeal in a two-to-one ruling.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Winter wallop continues across Canada, cancelling classes and stranding trucks

Winter wallop continues across Canada, cancelling classes and stranding trucks
Winter continued its late-December march east across Canada Friday, closing classes and stranding trucks.

Winter wallop continues across Canada, cancelling classes and stranding trucks

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law
The chief of a First Nation in the Great Bear Rainforest says B.C. Premier David Eby risks losing the trust of Indigenous people and could fuel racism if he changes the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act. 

Trust of First Nations 'fragile' as B.C. government considers changes to UN law

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report
A progress report on Canada's emissions targets shows the federal government's projection for greenhouse gas emissions in 2030 is higher than it was two years ago.

Canada gets further away from reaching 2030 emission target: report

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents
A planned high-speed rail project between Toronto and Quebec City could dramatically increase the number of trains that travel along the corridor each day, according to internal documents. 

Toronto—Quebec City high-speed rail could see dozens of daily trains: documents

Canada to begin formal talks with U.S. in January on review of free trade deal

Canada to begin formal talks with U.S. in January on review of free trade deal
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will enter into formal discussions with the United States in January to review their free trade agreement.

Canada to begin formal talks with U.S. in January on review of free trade deal

Weeks before total insured losses from B.C. flooding are tallied: insurance bureau

Weeks before total insured losses from B.C. flooding are tallied: insurance bureau
The Insurance Bureau of Canada says it will be several weeks before the insured losses are added up for a severe weather and flooding event that deluged parts of southern B.C. 

Weeks before total insured losses from B.C. flooding are tallied: insurance bureau