Showing posts with label Behind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Behind. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Criminal neglect not enough to keep mom behind bars

It is a curious country, this one, that you can be convicted of killing your child and still you get to walk out of the courtroom, free as a bird, la-dee-dah.

That’s what happened on Monday at Ontario Superior Court in Toronto.

Melissa Alexander was convicted of manslaughter in the scalding death of her 19-month-old son, Miguel, who died of massive third-degree immersion burns that his mommy dearest slathered with Vaseline and cotton batting, at some point tossing some of the little boy’s sloughed-off skin into the garbage can, before she left him and his nearly three-year-old brother, Shawn, in their apartment to go shopping.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Behind every military medal, a story

Veteran Tom White medals (L-R) Special Service Medal-2 Bars, Canadian Peace Service Medal, United Nations Emergency Force 1, United Nations Truce Supervision - Palestine, United Nations- Congo, Queen's Silver Jubilee, Canada 125th Birthday, Queen's Golden Jubilee, Canadian Decoration- 2 Bars, and (bottom) Minister of Veterans Affairs Commendation , taken 9 November 2010. - Veteran Tom White medals (L-R) Special Service Medal-2 Bars, Canadian Peace Service Medal, United Nations Emergency Force 1, United Nations Truce Supervision - Palestine, United Nations- Congo, Queen's Silver Jubilee, Canada 125th Birthday, Queen's Golden Jubilee, Canadian Decoration- 2 Bars, and (bottom) Minister of Veterans Affairs Commendation , taken 9 November 2010. | Paul Darrow for The Globe an Mail VeteransPublished Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2010 11:11PM ESTLast updated Thursday, Nov. 11, 2010 10:22AM EST1 comment

We see them every Nov. 11: A confetti of striking colours emblazoned across veterans' chests as we honour those who fought for Canada's freedom and the freedom of others.

From ‘freebies' shared with civilians to those awarded for having the courage to serve in the trenches, from honours for maintaining tenuous peace in war-torn regions to those for tours of duty in some of the world's most forbidding areas. They belong to Canada's warriors. To Canada's peacekeepers.