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To: gg cox who wrote (210019)1/9/2025 11:04:28 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

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Jamaican immigrant who fought deportation over robbery conviction now faces murder charge

His situation came to light in a recent Ontario case where he argued unsuccessfully for a six-month sentence for firearm possession

Author of the article:
Chris Lambie
Published Jan 09, 2025 • Last updated 11 hours ago • 4 minute read

322 Comments



Greater Sudbury Police officers were at the scene of a shooting on Louis Street in August 2023. A Jamaican immigrant who successfully fought deportation after a 2015 robbery conviction is facing charges for the murder of Andrew Mackey.

A young Jamaican immigrant who successfully fought off a deportation order during a decade-long string of crimes is now facing his most serious charge yet: second-degree murder.

David Pusey, 29, is accused of shooting 24-year-old Andrew Mackey, who had been rushed to hospital at 6:45 a.m. on Aug. 5, 2023, following an argument at a Sudbury, Ont., social gathering.

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Pusey, who has permanent resident status in Canada, once worked as a welder but has long been in trouble with the law. He arrived from Jamaica in 2011. His mother is a librarian in Jamaica. His father works in construction in Canada.

At the time of the 2023 shooting, he had been released pending trial on a gun charge. Details of his various crimes came to a light in a recent Ontario Court of Justice decision in the gun case. His lawyer had argued unsuccessfully for a six-month sentence for firearm possession to avoid the threat of deportation a second time.

Pusey argued that anti-Black racism he faced since coming to Canada should be a mitigating factor. The judge agreed it should be, but still sentenced him to four years in prison for possessing a loaded rifle.

“No sentence short of a penitentiary sentence is available, despite the presence of some mitigation and a stark collateral consequence on the immigration front,” Justice Amit Anil Ghosh said in a Jan. 2 decision.

“Mr. Pusey is again rendered inadmissible to Canada for ‘serious criminality’ and will have no right of appeal, given I must impose a custodial sentence of at least six months. He already had an existing removal order that had been stayed upon review, all stemming from his previous robbery conviction and sentence.”

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Police had searched Pusey’s home in Sudbury on April 25, 2020, acting on information gleaned from a wiretap that revealed that Pusey “had been urgently trying to obtain a firearm.” They found a loaded .22 rifle concealed in a bag of yard waste in the backyard, said the judge.

Information police obtained through the wiretap indicated that Pusey “told the ostensible gun trafficker that he planned to ‘use it,’ supporting the only reasonable inference that he was informing the seller that he either intended to brandish or discharge it,” said the judge.

The Crown argued Pusey should get five years in prison for the crime.

“The defence submits I should consider (without noting) his presentence custody for an unrelated murder charge to impose a sentence of less than six months, to navigate an immigration concern,” Ghosh said.

“He risks being deported with no right of appeal if he receives a sentence of over six months.”

Ghosh noted Pusey was sentenced to 134 days with probation for robbery in 2015. In 2017, he was fined $300 for possession of property obtained by crime.

Pusey only spent a week in pre-sentence custody on the gun charge before being released with conditions, said the judge. “However, he was arrested later for an unrelated murder charge and has remained in custody since.”

Pusey “was already once ordered deported due to the robbery sentence, but he successfully appealed and was granted a stay of the removal order,” Ghosh said. “If he receives a sentence here of six months or more, he will likely be deported without any right of appeal.”

The judge found that the law did not permit him “to consider the post-offence presentence custody accumulated for an unrelated murder charge. Aside from the legal prohibition to its use, it is additionally impermissible to use it to navigate the immigration issue. This admittedly serious collateral consequence cannot overwhelm the analysis for a fit and proportionate sentence, proposed by the defence to be years below the proper range. To do so would thwart the intention of Parliament in constructing the inadmissibility regime in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.”

As a mitigating factor, the judge considered that Pusey “may have experienced anti-Black racism and that this may have informed his involvement in crime.”

Pusey’s “arrival and maladjustment from Jamaica informed his limited academic and work trajectory,” Ghosh said. “He mentioned he has experienced discrimination during his time in Canada. I also accept that his neighbourhood dealt with gun violence, and that being Black, marginalized, and of limited means informed his engagement with the criminal justice system.”

In the Mackey case, Pusey is charged with second-degree murder, unauthorized possession of a firearm, possession of a weapon dangerous to the public peace, pointing a firearm, careless use of a firearm, unauthorized possession of a firearm, discharging a firearm with intent, breach of a release order, and breaching a weapons prohibition order.

(Pusey was also wanted on an outstanding warrant for obstructing police and breaching a release order concerning an incident in 2022.)

His four-day preliminary hearing wrapped up last month. Pusey is scheduled to learn Jan. 15 whether the murder case against him will go to trial.

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To: gg cox who wrote (210019)1/9/2025 11:06:16 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

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longz
Mick Mørmøny

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'It's OK if Canada isn't for you': This Calgary newcomer wants to go back home.

She isn't aloneTwo-fifths of newcomers would consider leaving Canada, CBC survey suggests



Karina Zapata · CBC News · Posted: Jan 09, 2025 6:00 AM CST | Last Updated: 3 hours ago



Ali Quina recently posted to social media about her struggles in Canada as a newcomer. She's on the verge of giving up and moving back to the Philippines. (Submitted by Ali Quina)

This story is part of Welcome to Canada, a CBC News series about immigration told through the eyes of the people who have experienced it.

A year and a half after moving to Canada from the Philippines, Ali Quina is strongly considering moving back home. Life here is just so much harder than people made it out to be, she said.

Quina came to Calgary looking for opportunities and a better quality of life. But even after moving here with work experience in marketing and completing a certificate at the University of Calgary, she's struggling to find a job in her field.

So she's working part time as a server and said she's barely getting by.

"My everyday routine would be waking up in the morning, sending applications and then after I would break down and cry.… I can barely afford to pay for my groceries, to be honest," said Quina.

"I'm just basing it off my experience, but Canada is not the land of opportunity anymore."

Now, she's sharing a message with other newcomers who feel like the hardship isn't paying off: "It's OK if Canada isn't for you."

She isn't the only one who feels that way, according to a new CBC News survey about newcomers' experiences, conducted by Pollara.

While eight in 10 newcomers have an overall positive experience in Canada, over 40 per cent of newcomers surveyed said they'd be likely to leave Canada if they were given the choice.



Although 40 per cent of newcomers surveyed said they'd consider leaving Canada, a Calgary migration researcher said he isn't expecting a surge of out-migration. A small portion of immigrants who say they want to leave Canada actually do. (Stephen Lubig/CBC)

They said they struggled with homesickness, discrimination and difficulties finding quality housing and work. Nearly a third said they would leave Canada to return to their home country, while others (20 per cent) said they would go to the United States next.

The survey, conducted by market research firm Pollara in November using an online panel, is made up of 1,507 people who arrived in Canada in the past 10 years. A national survey of that size would normally have a margin of error of +/- 2.5 per cent.

Despite challenges newcomers are facing, one migration researcher in Calgary said he isn't anticipating a surge of out-migration — but he is expecting to see more newcomers on temporary status move back home due to recent policy changes and the current political climate around immigration.

What the data saysStatistics Canada's latest analysis on out-migration shows more than 15 per cent of immigrants leave the country within 20 years of arriving.

People born in countries with higher standards of living in general — including Taiwan, the United States and France — are more likely to return home.

And in Canada, if people do leave, they usually do so within three to seven years of arriving.

But a recent report by the Institute for Canadian Citizenship, which helps newcomers settle here, said a growing number of immigrants are leaving the country. According to the report, skilled newcomers are more likely to leave.
"When they leave, we lose," institute CEO Daniel Bernhard told CBC News Network in a November interview.

"We need to take both supply and demand into account and to recognize that, yes, there are opportunities for reform of the system to make it smarter. But we need to make sure that the people who are selected to come here are able to succeed. Opening the door is not enough."

However, compared with bigger cities like Toronto and Vancouver, newcomers who settle in Calgary are more likely to stay in Canada, said the report.

Temporary newcomers could leaveRobert Falconer, a research fellow at the University of Calgary's School of Public Policy, said it isn't surprising that so many newcomers are expressing interest in leaving considering the state of the economy.

"While inflation is coming down, it's still been a very real experience for many people. COVID was very hard," said Falconer, who specializes in migration.

But he isn't too worried about the survey numbers — he said it doesn't mean there's a mass exodus of newcomers on the way. A small portion of immigrants who say they want to leave Canada actually do, he said.

He is expecting to see some changes in the short term, though.

"We're very likely to see an increase in the out-migration of international students, of temporary foreign workers, et cetera. I think the restrictions that the federal government has put in will incentivize people leaving," said Falconer.

The federal government is reducing immigration targets to stabilize population growth. Among other policies, it's slashing international student permits by another 10 per cent, and putting more limits on work permits for spouses of foreign workers and international students in master's degree programs.



Robert Falconer is a migration researcher at the University of Calgary School of Public Policy. (Submitted by Erin Shepley)

Local organizations that support newcomers say the crackdown on immigration in Canada and the U.S. can spread a message that puts the blame on immigrants for economic issues, and they believe it's leading to an increase in hostility toward newcomers.

Falconer said that could also affect people's decisions to stay, which is why it's important that politicians are extremely careful about the language they're using around immigration.

As for Quina, she's giving herself a few more months before making a final decision about whether she's going to leave. She's leaning toward pulling the plug and moving back home when her post-graduation work permit expires in November, instead of finding another avenue to stay.

In the meantime, she's sharing her experience on social media, in the hope other newcomers facing the same challenges don't feel alone.

"It's OK to give up," said Quina. "It's not going to be the end of everything, but rather the start of a new chapter."



To: gg cox who wrote (210019)1/10/2025 4:00:26 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
Mick Mørmøny

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Report: Terrorist threat to Canada ‘has rarely been higher’

Jan 9, 2025 9:00 am

By Christine Douglass-Williams

6 Comments

While the Liberal Government of Canada focused on the alleged threat of “white nationalism” and allowed jihad threats to fester under cover, those jihad threats were proliferating without the public being properly informed, except for a terse reference in the news cycle here and there. The Trudeau government’s primary concern was to not come across as “Islamophobic.”

Since 2017, Canada’s Security Intelligence Service acknowledged that dozens of ISIS jihadis were walking free, yet authorities won’t charge them. Such news should have been on front pages everywhere. But Canada was focused on DEI. Groups such as the Anti-Hate Network (led by Bernie Farber) continued to bleed taxpayers of funds so as to drive their disturbing radical left agendas, even in schools, while targeting anyone as an “Islamophobe” who warned about Canada’s jihad problem. Now, thanks to the likes of the Anti-Hate Network and a CAIR offshoot, the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM), which aggressively wielded the “Islamophobia” battering ram, the terrorist threat to Canada “has rarely been higher.”



“Terrorist threat to Canada ‘has rarely been higher,’ report says,” by Stewart Bell, Global News, January 8, 2025:

The terrorist threat in Canada “has rarely been higher,” according to a report released on Wednesday in the aftermath of the New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans.

“The bottom line: Terrorism in Canada is on the rise,” said the study, which found a “statistically significant” surge in terrorism charges between 2007 and 2024.

The number of charges is “an important indicator” of the threat, since terrorism arrests often stem from foiled attack plots, the Ottawa firm Insight Threat Intelligence wrote.

“Across the board, terrorism attacks and charges have increased in this country over the last 18 years.”

Most of the 73 charges during that period involved “religiously motivated” terrorists, specifically followers of “jihadist groups” like the Islamic State and al-Qaida.

“However, over the last four years, there has been an increase in diversity of motivation, with ideologically motivated individuals also being charged with terrorism offences,” it said….