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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: pocotrader who wrote (1302191)5/29/2021 6:50:12 PM
From: pocotrader1 Recommendation

Recommended By
J_F_Shepard

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Every country has covidiots, it doesn't bother me if they get sick and die but they clog up hospitals and wear hospital staff down affecting those who need other health care.



To: pocotrader who wrote (1302191)5/29/2021 8:36:48 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

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Mick Mørmøny
Winfastorlose

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Brothers killed in drive-by shooting 'didn't expect to die,' family says

Abdullah, 34, and Mohamad, 27, pronounced dead at scene; 3rd brother wounded

May 29, 2021



Ottawa police investigate a drive-by shooting on Alta Vista Drive on May 28, 2021, that left two men dead and a third man suffering from non-life threatening injuries. (Mathieu Thériault/CBC)

At the home of Abdulaziz and Mohamad Abdullah, their half-eaten food remains on a plate, their shoes at the front door.

"Never to be worn again," said a family member, whom CBC Ottawa is not naming because of concerns for her safety.

The two men — Abdullaziz, 34, and Mohamad, 27 — were shot dead in a drive-by shooting outside an Alta Vista strip mall Friday evening.

A third brother, Fawaz Abdullah, who was shot in the leg and underwent surgery at hospital, is expected to survive his injuries.

Ottawa police believe the shootings, and the men, were targeted.

The drive-by shooting occurred just after 6:30 p.m. The brothers, believed to have been unarmed at the time, were shot near their white Range Rover at the sidewalk edge of a packed parking lot at the intersection of Alta Vista Drive and Dorion Avenue.
Eyewitnesses who described the confrontation told CBC they heard gunshot after gunshot. Police and paramedics descended on the area. One of the brothers was found dead inside the vehicle, while another was on the ground.

Police covered the driver's side window of the SUV with a white sheet and placed a yellow tarp on the dead man on the ground. They cordoned off the entire parking lot and plaza, which contains a Shoppers Drug Mart and Tim Hortons, with police tape.

A group of men stood watch across the street Friday evening near the bodies of their slain friends, their numbers slowly growing as police remained at the scene.

The family said it was Fawaz who alerted relatives and friends about what happened, telling his mother and sister that his brothers had been killed.

At the family home, mourners arrived to offer their condolences to a family struck by unimaginable tragedy — three brothers shot in one evening — and police officers stood guard through the night, the family member said.

History with courtsTwo of the Abdullah brothers have a history with the criminal courts and gang-related violence.

Abdulaziz Abdullah, or "EZ," has been convicted numerous times for gang-and-gun violence. He was due in court in Toronto in September to face an attempted murder charge.

His convictions range from gun possession to being an accessory after a homicide. He was also convicted for his involvement in a 2008 gang-related drive-by shooting in Ottawa's south end.

In 2011, Abdulaziz was convicted of brandishing a gun to get rid of people from a hotel party. He then barricaded himself inside a room and a six-hour standoff with police ensued. He was convicted of possessing and carelessly handling a semi-automatic handgun.



The parking lot of the Alta Vista Drive strip mall where 34-year-old Abdulaziz Abdullah and 27-year-old Mohamad Abdullah were shot to death on May 28, 2021, is seen here the following morning. (Uday Rana/CBC)

Court records tell the story of a family that tried to steer him and his brothers away from a life of guns.

He came to Canada from Kuwait when he was seven years old, according to the sentencing decision from the hotel case. After youth brushes with the law and "what his family considered to be undesirable friends," the family returned to Kuwait.

Abdulaziz returned to Canada in 2007, and criminal charges and convictions continued.

He pleaded guilty in October 2016 to being an accessory and getaway driver in the 2015 homicide of Sharif Said.

Fawaz, or "Caesar," was charged with two counts of attempted murder in a drive-by shooting in 2014. He pleaded guilty to lesser firearms charges in 2016 and was sentenced to three years and 131 days in prison.

'They paid their debt'

Despite their mistakes, they didn't deserve to be victims of such violence, their family member said.

The three brothers, along with their sister and mother, are the only members of the family living in Ottawa, the woman said, adding that the brothers were devoted to their mother and family.

"But when with boys in the street, they were different men," she said. "Every time they leave the house, they are afraid it's their last day because of mistakes in the past."

They came to Canada as immigrants and grew up in a rough neighbourhood, the woman said. There were times that the family — devout and religious Muslims — distanced themselves from the brothers.

Despite their negative past, they were still loved, respected and had a family. They were truly victims.
But in recent years, the woman said, they were growing up and becoming adults. They recently celebrated Eid together. They were making plans to plant a garden.

Their mother, the woman said, refused to leave them because she feared if she did that, they would choose the wrong path for good.

On Friday evening, Abdulaziz and Mohamad "didn't expect to die," the woman said. They were all just innocently hanging out together, as brothers, in the parking lot.

"They paid their debt to society," she said. "Despite their negative past, they were still loved, respected and had a family. They were truly victims."

Police appeal for information

Since the killing, police have found a white Acura parked in Kanata South off of Old Richmond Road that was reported stolen from Toronto, according to police sources.

It's believed to be the getaway vehicle used in the triple shooting.

The Abdullah brothers' deaths are the fifth and sixth homicides in Ottawa in 2021.

Police do not believe that Friday's double homicide is related to the fatal shooting of Abdulkadir Yusuf earlier this week.

They are asking anyone with information to call the homicide unit at 613-236-1222 ext. 5493.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR



Shaamini Yogaretnam

CBC Ottawa reporter

Shaamini Yogaretnam is CBC Ottawa's justice, crime and police reporter. She has spent nearly a decade covering crime in the nation's capital. You can reach her at shaamini.yogaretnam@cbc.ca or 613-220-2486.



To: pocotrader who wrote (1302191)5/29/2021 8:41:18 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Mick Mørmøny
Winfastorlose

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Canadian Muslims - One Big Happy Bunch of Canucks! ----------------

Police investigate city's 4th homicide of 2021

Victim Abdulqadir Yusuf, 22, acquitted in 2019 shooting

May 27, 2021



Ottawa police investigate a shooting on Palmerston Drive on May 26, 2021. (CBC)

Abdulqadir Yusuf was unresponsive inside a Hyundai Sonata in a Palmerston Drive parking lot when the 911 calls started pouring in.

Ottawa police and paramedics arrived just before 9 p.m. Wednesday to find a homicide scene. Yusuf, 22, was dead from a gunshot to the head.

Residents on Palmerston Drive told CBC News on Thursday that they didn't recognize the vehicle, a silver sedan that had been parked in residential parking lot E of 1462 Palmerston Dr., nor the name of the victim. None of those residents recalls even hearing a gunshot, which police believe could have occurred during the tail end of a holiday long weekend full of fireworks.

Homicide detectives are still trying to determine when exactly Yusuf was killed.

Victim acquitted in 2019 shooting

Earlier this year, Yusuf himself was acquitted of a shooting in Overbook in September 2019.

At the time of his arrest, Yusuf had been under police surveillance as the suspected gunman in the shooting. The gun was discarded and found several blocks from the scene, where police alleged he shot several rounds at a vehicle. There were no injuries.



Abdulqadir Yusuf, 22, was found dead inside this silver sedan. (CBC)

Yusuf was arrested by the Ottawa police guns and gangs unit and charged with several firearms offences and breaching conditions imposed on him by the court. He was found not guilty of those charges in March.

Police feared retaliation for 2016 killing

Yusuf's older brother, Mohamud Yusuf, is currently serving a 14-year prison sentence for manslaughter for his role in the 2016 gangland slaying of drug dealer Mohamed Najdi.

That homicide case ended in drama when the alleged shooter and an alleged co-conspirator were acquitted by a jury in November 2018. At the time, police feared the fallout from the acquittals and expected retaliation from both the families of the victim and the accused.

Homicide detectives have not yet established a motive for Yusuf's killing, nor have they identified any suspects.

Yusuf's is the city's fourth homicide of 2021.

Investigators ask that anyone with information about the killing call the Ottawa police homicide unit at 613-236-1222 ext. 5493.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR



Shaamini Yogaretnam

CBC Ottawa reporter

Shaamini Yogaretnam is CBC Ottawa's justice, crime and police reporter. She has spent nearly a decade covering crime in the nation's capital. You can reach her at shaamini.yogaretnam@cbc.ca or 613-220-2486.



To: pocotrader who wrote (1302191)5/29/2021 9:01:13 PM
From: Winfastorlose2 Recommendations

Recommended By
FJB
Mick Mørmøny

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You don't even know fake news propaganda when you see it do you? You post it here all of the time. You and Broomie should get married. TWO PEAS IN A POD.