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Local

Manitoba man, 24, found guilty on national Red Dress Day of first-degree murder in slaying of Indigenous woman

Dean Pritchard 5 minute read Updated: 12:38 PM CDT

On national Red Dress Day, a crowd of about 100 looked to the sky outside the Winnipeg Law Courts Tuesday morning and shouted “We love you Mackaylah!” minutes after Mackaylah Gerard-Roussin’s killer was found guilty of first-degree murder.

King’s Bench Justice Candace Grammond found Josh Benoit guilty before a packed courtroom.

“Justice won’t bring her back, but we got justice and that’s all we wanted,” said Gerard-Roussin’s grandmother, Irene Roussin.

“I wouldn’t wish this on anybody because it’s been such a tragedy,” she said. “It will never be over.”

Local

Youth pastor accused in sex assault of teen camp counsellor

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Preview

Youth pastor accused in sex assault of teen camp counsellor

Tyler Searle 4 minute read Updated: 12:05 PM CDT

City police have charged a youth pastor with sex crimes, accusing him of grooming a teenager while he was acting as the director of a youth day camp at a Winnipeg church.

Police received information about a sexual assault involving the suspect in March, and learned he directed a youth camp group, the Winnipeg Police Service said in a news release Tuesday.

The offences are alleged to have occurred between August 2025 and March 2026, when “the pastor forged a sexual relationship by grooming and gaining the trust of a youth camp counsellor who was a teenager at the time,” the release said.

“The survivor met with the accused on multiple occasions in private and also received sexually explicit material sent by the accused.”

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Updated: 12:05 PM CDT

Local

Drug use cited in downtown blaze

Tyler Searle 5 minute read Preview

Drug use cited in downtown blaze

Tyler Searle 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

The partner of a man who died in a fire inside a Manitoba Housing complex last month believes his death was an accident, resulting from him falling asleep while using drugs.

Corinne Baxter said she thinks her boyfriend Tristan Fraser-Smith was alone inside her suite on the eighth floor of 444 Kennedy St. on April 20 when a fire started in the unit, reportedly causing an explosion and forcing dozens of tenants to flee the 16-storey apartment complex.

“It really hurts my heart. It feels like it’s going to explode when I think about it,” Baxter said in an interview Monday.

“The pain doesn’t seem to stop or go away.”

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2:00 AM CDT

Local

Court tosses wrongful conviction suit against province filed by man jailed for Derksen’s death

Erik Pindera 4 minute read Preview

Court tosses wrongful conviction suit against province filed by man jailed for Derksen’s death

Erik Pindera 4 minute read Yesterday at 6:36 PM CDT

Manitoba’s highest court has dismissed a wrongful conviction lawsuit against the provincial government filed by the man who was acquitted of killing Candace Derksen.

Mark Grant’s lawyers filed his lawsuit in 2019, seeking $8.5 million for wrongful conviction and imprisonment from the province, the attorney general and the City of Winnipeg. The legal action against the city is slated to proceed.

Lawyers for the province unsuccessfully moved to have his claim struck in the Court of King’s Bench twice. Their third attempt, in the Court of Appeal, succeeded.

Court of Appeal Justice Christopher Mainella, writing on behalf of a panel with two other appeal court judges, threw out the claim against the provincial government and attorney general in a decision issued last week.

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Yesterday at 6:36 PM CDT

Manitoba Moose

Moose look to punch back on the road in Grand Rapids

Ken Wiebe 6 minute read Preview

Moose look to punch back on the road in Grand Rapids

Ken Wiebe 6 minute read 2:33 PM CDT

The Manitoba Moose recognize they can’t afford to get in a track meet with the Grand Rapids Griffins in order to advance in the Calder Cup playoffs.

So, as this best-of-five series — which is tied 1-1 — resumes on Wednesday at Van Andel Arena, the Moose will be trying to thread the needle between finding a way to generate more offence while not sacrificing anything defensively.

These two teams have combined for just three goals through two games, with each team pitching a shutout so far — 1-0 for the Moose on Saturday and 2-0 for the Griffins on Sunday.

Two of the three goals have come on the power play, while the Griffins have tallied the lone marker at even strength, and that came with just over five minutes to go in Game 2.

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2:33 PM CDT

Music

Province announces $15-M contribution to bring closed Pantages Playhouse back to life

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read Preview

Province announces $15-M contribution to bring closed Pantages Playhouse back to life

Gabrielle Piché 3 minute read 1:31 PM CDT

Music filled a shuttered downtown theatre Tuesday from a string section, and from voices celebrating a $15-million injection into the site.

The Manitoba government announced the money to “help bring the Pantages Playhouse back to life,” Premier Wab Kinew said.

The theatre — at the corner of Main Street and Market Avenue — has been closed for the last eight years. It opened in 1914 and was once a hub for vaudeville performers, including Charlie Chaplin.

It’s now being eyed as a home for the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra. First, major renovations are needed, including improvements to acoustics.

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1:31 PM CDT

Opinion

Canada

Former Supreme Court Justice Louise Arbour named as next governor general

Kyle Duggan and Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

Former Supreme Court Justice Louise Arbour named as next governor general

Kyle Duggan and Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Updated: 1:57 PM CDT

OTTAWA - Prime Minister Mark Carney named retired Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour as Canada's next governor general on Tuesday, hailing her as a storied defender of human rights.

The accomplished former jurist is fluently bilingual, and has served as UN human rights commissioner and chief prosecutor at The Hague.

Arbour, 79, was chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, and made history when she became the first to indict a sitting head of state, president Slobodan Milosevic, for crimes against humanity.

The Montreal native also secured the first conviction for genocide since the establishment of the 1948 Genocide Convention, and became first to prosecute sexual assaults as crimes against humanity.

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Updated: 1:57 PM CDT

Business

US says ceasefire with Iran is holding despite attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and against the UAE

Adam Schreck, Ben Finley And Elena Becatoros, The Associated Press 6 minute read Preview

US says ceasefire with Iran is holding despite attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and against the UAE

Adam Schreck, Ben Finley And Elena Becatoros, The Associated Press 6 minute read Updated: 1:38 PM CDT

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — U.S. military leaders said a ceasefire remains in effect a day after Iran was blamed for new attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and against the United Arab Emirates. The key American ally later said it came under Iranian drone and missile attack again on Tuesday.

Still, the fragile truce reached nearly a month ago appeared to be holding as U.S. forces pressed ahead with efforts to reopen the strait, a vital waterway for global energy. On Monday, the U.S. said it had opened a lane and sunk six small Iranian boats that had threatened commercial ships.

So far, only two merchant ships are known to have passed through the new U.S.-guarded route, with hundreds more bottled up in the Persian Gulf. Shippers are still wary, and it's unclear whether U.S. military action can reassure them without reigniting the conflict that began with U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran on Feb. 28.

Iran’s effective closure of the strait, through which major oil and gas supplies passed before the war, along with fertilizer and other petroleum products, has sent fuel prices skyrocketing and rattled the global economy. Breaking Iran's grip would deny its main source of leverage as U.S. President Donald Trump demands a major rollback of its disputed nuclear program.

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Updated: 1:38 PM CDT

Local

Winnipeg officer pleads not guilty to tampering with evidence at crime scene

Dean Pritchard 7 minute read Preview

Winnipeg officer pleads not guilty to tampering with evidence at crime scene

Dean Pritchard 7 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 8:02 PM CDT

A city police constable and one-time partner of imprisoned former police officer Elston Bostock is now on trial accused of compromising a crime scene the two men had been assigned to protect.

Jonathan Kiazyk, an 18-year veteran of the Winnipeg Police Service at the time of the October 2022 incident, pleaded not guilty Monday morning to charges of entering a dwelling with intent to commit theft, obstructing a police officer and breach of trust.

Kiazyk is accused of entering a Stradbrook Avenue Airbnb rental with Bostock before a search warrant had been secured and disturbing evidence, defying direction to remain outside the suite.

“Police are entrusted with an enormous amount of power and responsibility,” Crown attorney Adam Gingera said in an opening address Monday morning to King’s Bench Justice Candace Grammond. “The Crown alleges that Const. Jonathan Kiazyk brazenly misused that power to engage in conduct that inadvertently undermined a serious drug trafficking operation and that he did so casually and with utter disregard for the public interest in the actual investigation of crime.”

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Updated: Yesterday at 8:02 PM CDT

Local

WRHA pulls home-care services out of North End building over safety concerns

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

WRHA pulls home-care services out of North End building over safety concerns

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 5:17 PM CDT

The Winnipeg Regional Health Authority has temporarily stopped providing home-care services in a North End public housing block after deeming the building unsafe.

Residents who receive home care at 145 Powers St. have had to cross the street to the Indigenous Family Centre for their appointments since mid-March amid concerns about violent crime, drug use and possible gang activity.

“Providing safe, compassionate and quality home care is a priority. That not only includes the safety of clients, but of staff as well,” a WRHA spokesperson said in a statement.

“The WRHA is confident that the agencies managing the building are working to address the current situation. Once the situation has improved at 145 Powers St., the WRHA plans to return to providing home-care services within the building.”

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Updated: Yesterday at 5:17 PM CDT

Local

Sign of the pre-election times: Sals snub highlighted on downtown billboard

Malak Abas 5 minute read Preview

Sign of the pre-election times: Sals snub highlighted on downtown billboard

Malak Abas 5 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 8:57 PM CDT

An unusual piece of pre-civic election season political messaging has popped up in downtown Winnipeg.

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Updated: Yesterday at 8:57 PM CDT

Olympics

Stars on Ice skaters embrace high fashion with designer dresses

Laurie Nealin 5 minute read Preview

Stars on Ice skaters embrace high fashion with designer dresses

Laurie Nealin 5 minute read Yesterday at 4:29 PM CDT

If anyone knows how to make a statement, it’s Canadian Olympian Deanna Stellato-Dudek.

Not only did the 42-year-old make history in February as the oldest female figure skater to compete at the Olympic Games in almost a century, Oscar de la Renta dressed her for the occasion — in Milan, Italy, one of the great fashion capitals of the world.

“I think a partnership between haute couture and figure skating is a match made in heaven,” says Stellato-Dudek, who won three Canadian titles and the 2024 world championship with pairs partner Maxime Deschamps.

Her collaboration with the New York fashion house marked the luxury brand’s first foray into figure skating costume design.

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Yesterday at 4:29 PM CDT

Amateur

Winnipeg cyclist Smith having breakout season with pro stage race debut

Joshua Frey-Sam 7 minute read Preview

Winnipeg cyclist Smith having breakout season with pro stage race debut

Joshua Frey-Sam 7 minute read Yesterday at 4:37 PM CDT

Clara Hughes. Leah Kirchmann. Adam Smith?

It might be a bit ambitious to place his name among some of the most accomplished athletes in Manitoba’s rich — and likely underrated — road cycling history right now, but Smith, a 19-year-old from Winnipeg, is providing every reason to believe that he could be well on his way.

You see, Smith, a climber cyclist, has ascended steadily both nationally and internationally over the last few seasons, and now finds himself in the middle of a breakout season overseas that could yield a professional contract sooner than later and catapult his career to new heights.

Smith recently raced on the mountainous terrains of Asturias, Spain, in the Vuelta Asturias UCI 2.1 road race — a four-stage professional event that featured some of the best riders in the world — and did more than hold his own, especially early on.

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Yesterday at 4:37 PM CDT

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