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Free Press Head Start for Jan. 30

Good morning.

A disciplinary panel has rejected the discriminatory claims underpinning the suspension of a nursing student from the University of Manitoba after she made social media posts condemning the Israeli government and military. Maggie Macintosh has the story.

A Winnipeg Police Service sergeant is suing two fellow officers and the former head of the police union, accusing them of “malicious prosecution” and a “calculated” scheme to subvert the administration of criminal justice and force his retirement. Carol Sanders reports.

— David Fuller

 

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Your forecast

Mainly cloudy, clearing late this morning, with wind becoming south at 30 km/h gusting to 50 near noon. High 4 C, wind chill -11 this morning.

What’s happening today

The Winnipeg Jets face the Pittsburgh Penguins at PPG Paints Arena, starting at 6 p.m.

Today’s must-read

Winnipeg police are facing allegations of excessive force after videos of an arrest that turned fatal show officers beating an intoxicated man with a baton and shocking him with a Taser before carrying his limp body away.

A University of Winnipeg criminologist who viewed the footage called it “gluttony of physical punishment,” and three eyewitnesses who captured the video of the incident in the parking lot of their Crestview apartment complex have been left shaken by what they saw. Tyler Searle has the story.

Video footage from a doorbell camera of the arrest outside the 200 block of Fairlane Avenue. (SUPPLIED)

Video footage from a doorbell camera of the arrest outside the 200 block of Fairlane Avenue. (SUPPLIED)

On the bright side

New and expectant moms at Villa Rosa pregnancy support centre are again putting their artistic skills on display. Last winter, residents at the Wolseley area facility painted benches on the Wolseley Winter Wonderland’s frozen river trail, collaborating on four different designs of Indigenous-themed artwork.

This year, single, pregnant students had their sights set on an even bigger canvas: an inukshuk, provided to them in individual pieces that would be turned into a finished product once designed. Kieran Reimer has the story.

Members of the Villa Rosa community and Assiniboine River Art Knowledge keepers took part in a small ceremony on the Assiniboine River to honour for creating artwork, including four benches and an inukshuk (foreground) for the Wolseley Winter Wonderland River Trail. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press)

Members of the Villa Rosa community and Assiniboine River Art Knowledge keepers took part in a small ceremony on the Assiniboine River to honour for creating artwork, including four benches and an inukshuk (foreground) for the Wolseley Winter Wonderland River Trail. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press)

On this date

On Jan. 30, 1937: The Winnipeg Free Press reported the president of the Winnipeg Electric Co. sought the abolition of a gross earnings tax and and modifcation of charges for paving and snow removal that affected his streetcar company, in a presentation to the city’s transportation committee. Flooding on the Ohio River affected water levels on the Mississippi, where workers strove to maintain levees over a 1,000-mile stretch. Read the rest of this day’s paper here. Search our archives for more here.

Today’s front page

Get the full story: Read today’s e-edition of the Free Press.

 
 

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Top news

Nicole Buffie:

RCMP charge ex-Winnipegger living in B.C. with murder in Indigenous woman’s 2007 slaying

A B.C. man who formerly lived in Winnipeg has been charged with second-degree murder, 17 years after an Indigenous woman’s body was found near Lake Manitoba. Crystal Saunders, 24, was last seen by ... Read More

 

Tyler Searle:

Arbitrator opens hearings on Manitoba Nurses Union grievance over safety in, around HSC

An arbitration hearing to settle a grievance between Shared Health and the union representing Manitoba nurses began Monday morning — the latest development in an ongoing dispute over safety on the Health Sciences Centre campus. Read More

 

Erik Pindera:

Man accused in restaurant owner’s death has long criminal record, suffers from psychosis

The man accused of causing the death of a St. James restaurant owner last week was recently declared fit to stand trial on a mischief charge despite psychiatric professionals determining he was suffer... Read More

 
 
 

New in Sports

Taylor Allen:

Cameron added to Scotties field

Inclusion of team sees four Manitoba squads at national championship Read More

 

Mike McIntyre:

So far, so good

Power play one source of concern for high-flying Jets Read More

 

Mike Sawatzky:

Rogue league creating chaos in CJHL

Prairie super league a possibility after AJHL defections to B.C. Read More

 
 

New in Arts and Entertainment

Randall King:

Manitoba film scene set to spring into action

The Manitoba film industry is quite literally getting back in action this spring with a major studio movie scheduled to go to camera with an Oscar-winning actor in the lead. Ke Huy Quan made a swee... Read More

 

David Friend, The Canadian Press:

MuchMusic doc pulled from Crave months after director says he clashed with labels

A MuchMusic documentary that once came under scrutiny for using a deep catalogue of popular music has been pulled from its premiere date on Crave. Representatives for Bell... Read More

 

The Associated Press:

‘Expats,’ starring Nicole Kidman, was filmed in Hong Kong, but you can’t watch it there

HONG KONG (AP) — Nicole Kidman’s latest project is set in Hong Kong, but people who live there are blocked from seeing it, prompting speculation about censorship in a city where civil liberties are shrinking fast. The first two episodes of “Expats,” a six-episode drama about expat women, were released on Amazon Prime on Jan. 26. But when viewers in Hong Kong try to watch it, they instead get a message saying that “this video is currently unavailable to watch in your location.” The city has hardened its controls over political speech after 2019 anti-government protests rocked the city. In […] Read More

 
 

New in Business

Gabrielle Piché:

No. 1… with strings attached?

Website asking local business to pay to maintain top ranking on its free list ‘unethical,’ owner says Read More

 

Martin Cash:

Login Canada plugs into short-run book printing game

Login Canada Ltd. is a Winnipeg-based book distributor with more than two million titles available for customers to order. Read More

 
 

Fresh opinions

Editorial:

A modest proposal, 2024

This past weekend, the federal Conservatives met in Ottawa to get ready for the coming session in Parliament. Read More

 

Rochelle Squires:

Ending hockey’s toxic masculinity

Hockey arenas were never a place I frequented much, even before news broke about the high-profile sexual assault scandal involving several hockey players from the 2018 world junior hockey team and a 20-year-old woman known as E.M. But now, knowing what I know, I, and likely many other sexual assault survivors, find the sport all too triggering. Read More

 

Marianne Cerilli:

Building a better social safety net

There is growing alarm about the gap between income and the cost of living. It is being referred to as an “affordability crisis.” But isn’t it really an inequity crisis? Read More

 
 

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