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Man accused of aiding Canadian Olympian’s alleged drug network set for U.S. extradition

The first of four Canadians arrested last October in Ontario in relation to an alleged transnational drug trafficking ring has consented to his surrender to the United States.
Wearing a blue sweatshirt, Rakhim Ibragimov looked relaxed and smiled at a woman sitting in the gallery of the downtown Toronto courtroom, as his lawyer Harval Bassi told Superior Court Justice Peter Bawden that Igragimov would be waiving his right to an extradition hearing.
In October 2024, Ibragimov and three other Canadians were arrested by Canadian law enforcement at the request of United States authorities for their roles in an alleged drug-smuggling network linked to the Mexican Cartel.
The alleged leader of the network, former Canadian Olympic snowboarder Ryan James Wedding, remains at large and is on the list of the top 10 most wanted fugitives by the FBI. In March, the FBI also announced up to $10 million for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of Wedding, who participated in the giant slalom snowboarding event for Canada in the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah. He is last known to be residing in Mexico.
Kieran Gill, prosecutor for the attorney general of Canada told court that Ibragimov is wanted by the United States in relation to his role as “a courier” on behalf of the drug transportation network. Gill said it’s alleged that Ibragimov worked with individuals based out of Mexico including Wedding and Andrew Clark, another Canadian who was arrested in Mexico last October.
“He (Ibragimov) was arrested om April 9, 2024, while transporting 330 kg of cocaine from Wedding’s courier into his vehicle,” Gill told Bawden in her synopsis of the allegations. “That’s his role in the large conspiracy to move cocaine from the US into Canada.”
As part of FBI Operation Giant Slalom, U.S. authorities indicted 16 people including 10 Canadians for a range of serious charges, including drug trafficking, murder, conspiracy to murder and continuing a criminal enterprise.

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At the time of the arrests, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in California said the defendants were charged with allegedly running and participating in a transnational drug trafficking operation that routinely shipped hundreds of kilograms of cocaine from Columbia, through Mexico and Southern California, to Canada and other locations in the United States. It also alleged the drug network’s “leaders orchestrated multiple murders in furtherance of these drug crimes.”
It’s alleged that Wedding and Clark, his second in command, conspired to ship bulk quantities of cocaine — weighing hundreds of kilograms — from Southern California to Canada through a Canada-based drug transportation network run by Hardeep Ratte, 45, and Gurpreet Singh, 30, both from Ontario, from approximately January 2024 to August 2024.
“The cocaine shipments were transported from Mexico to the Los Angeles area, where the cocaine trafficking organization’s operatives would store the cocaine in stash houses, before delivering it to the transportation network couriers for transportation to Canada using long-haul semi-trucks,” said the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
According to extradition documents filed in court, Ibragimov, also known as “George” or “Russian,” is sought by the U.S. to stand trial for conduct equivalent to the Canadian offence of conspiracy to traffic cocaine.
The documents allege that Ratte and Singh, who operated a drug transportation network (“DTP”), would pick up cocaine on behalf of the DTO from the Los Angeles area for delivery to Canada. The DTP organized two deliveries for the DTO, one in March 2024 and another in April 2024.
It is alleged that Ibragimov was a co-conspirator in the second delivery and served as a courier for the DTP.
“Specifically, on April 9, 2024, Ibragimov was arrested by FBI agents while in the process of transferring a large amount of cocaine from a Chevrolet truck into his rented SUV in Riverside, California. The total amount of cocaine seized during this transfer was 375 kilograms,” state the documents.
Wedding and Clark allegedly directed the Nov. 20, 2023, murders of a Jagtar Singh Sidhu, 57 and Harbhajan Kaur Sidhu, 55, in Caledon, Ont. Their daughter was also shot but survived, suffering serious physical injuries.
According to U.S. officials, the murders were in retaliation for a stolen drug shipment that passed through southern Ontario. When the charges were announced, the OPP said the victims were not involved in drug trafficking and were “completely innocent”.
Wedding and Clark allegedly also ordered the murder of another victim on May 18, 2024, over a drug debt. Peel police said the victim was a 39-year-old man from Brampton.
Clark and Malik Damion Cunningham, 23, another Canadian, are also charged with the April 1, 2024, murder of Randy Fader, a Niagara Falls man who was gunned down outside his home.
Ratte began a bail hearing in January but it was never completed. An extradition hearing has yet to be set for him.
Gurpreet Singh was denied bail in February. His extradition hearing has yet to be scheduled along with an extradition hearing for Cunningham.
Canada’s justice minister, Sean Fraser, must now ask for a surrender order so that Ibragimov can be sent to California, which could happen at any time. It’s there he will stand trial on drug trafficking charges.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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Indigenous groups question government funding for Métis Nation of Ontario

First Nations in Ontario and the Manitoba Métis Federation say nearly $1 billion in federal funding went to a group they allege is fraudulently claiming Métis identity.
The Chiefs of Ontario, which represents 133 First Nations in the province, shared with The Canadian Press data on more than 20 years worth of federal funding provided to the Métis Nation of Ontario.
It suggests that $819,836,061 went from Ottawa to the MNO — an organization First Nations leaders say has no legitimacy and threatens their rights.
“This data shows just how badly First Nations in Ontario are being harmed by the diversion of government funding to the MNO and away from the needs of First Nations and other legitimate groups,” the Chiefs of Ontario said in a media statement.
“The question is, why is the Crown sending hundreds of millions of dollars to the MNO when there is overwhelming evidence contradicting their claims?”
The data indicates the money came from several federal departments, including Indigenous Services Canada, Crown-Indigenous Relations, Parks Canada and Environment and Climate Change Canada.
The MNO also received funds from the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission and the Impact Assessment Agency related to the potential impacts of projects in their communities.
The conflict between First Nations, some Métis groups and the MNO stems from a 2017 decision by the government of Ontario to recognize six “new, historic” Métis communities in the province — and a 2023 federal government bill, which never passed, that would have affirmed the MNO’s right to self-government.
First Nations and other Métis groups say the communities represented by the MNO have no claim to Métis heritage and Ottawa and Ontario have no right to recognize them.

Last month, history professor Leila Inksetter of the University of Quebec in Montreal released a report drafted on behalf of the Wabun Tribal Council that concluded there is no evidence of a mixed-ancestry community in the Wabun Tribal Council’s territory in northeastern Ontario.
The MNO rejected that report, saying that despite years of outside attempts “to discredit” it, “nothing has changed.”

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“The facts of history will not change because a new ‘expert’ has been paid to peddle the same Métis denialism,” the group said in a media statement.
The MNO has cited a 2003 decision by the Supreme Court of Canada to recognize a Métis community in and around Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. The case did not consider the six new communities recognized in 2017, but rather what may constitute a Métis right.
Another report, published last month and commissioned by Saugeen Ojibway Nation, also concluded there is no evidence of a distinct Métis community in their territory in southwestern Ontario.
“The historical evidence simply does not support this claim,” says the nearly 200-page report, written by two historians at the University of Toronto.
While the report says there were “certainly individuals and families of mixed ancestry” in the region, that can’t form the basis of a claim to a distinct community within Saugeen Ojibway Nation territory.

Jennifer St. Germain, MNO chief strategy officer, said Métis and First Nations “should not be working at odds as we are not enemies.”
“We have worked together throughout our shared history to push colonial governments to respect the rights of Métis and First Nations peoples, to properly invest in the programs that matter to our families and communities, and to uphold the honour of the Crown,” she said.
“When the MNO and Ontario First Nations work together, we make real change for the better for our children, families, and communities, as well as our lands and waters.
“It’s time to get back to the table rooted in our shared values of honesty, truth, and respect.”
The Chiefs of Ontario says that the academic research “merely reaffirms reality.”
“Not only are Ontario and Canada refusing to consult First Nations, they refuse to share the research they relied on or acknowledge the growing body of research and take steps to fix their mistakes,” the Chiefs of Ontario said in a media statement.
“It is extremely disappointing that Canada and Ontario … failed to do any adequate research before recognizing the MNO.”
Open disputes over claims to Métis heritage came close last year to ripping apart the Métis National Council, which once acted as a national voice for Métis but now has just two provincial members.
The Métis Nation-Saskatchewan withdrew from the Métis National Council last September, citing concerns about the MNO and claiming the council had failed to ensure the integrity of its citizenship registry.

The Métis Nation British Columbia withdrew from the council shortly after, saying it had lost confidence in the council’s ability to serve as a national advocacy organization.
Their departure came years after the Manitoba Métis Federation withdrew from the council, citing similar concerns.
Will Goodon, the Manitoba Métis Federation’s minister of identity protection and inter-Indigenous affairs, said the amount of public money available to Métis communities is limited and should not be shared with bodies that are not connected to what he calls the historic Métis Nation — largely recognized as descendants of the Red River communities in Manitoba.
One Parks Canada grant received by the MNO was meant to allow the organization to secure land and “support creation of an ecological corridor in the region along the north shore of Lake Superior,” says a federal document.
Goodon said that type of funding raises red flags for both Red River Métis and First Nations concerned about the prospect of the MNO seeking land in their territories.

The Manitoba Métis Federation said it’s also troubled by the fact that the federal government last week invited MNO leaders to a meeting to discuss its controversial major projects legislation.
The federation, which boycotted that meeting, said the MNO’s invitation undermined the integrity of the gathering and put the government’s major projects agenda at risk.
“Canada and Ontario are pushing pro-development agendas. They say they will consult with ‘Indigenous communities’ but, in Ontario, the only consultations that should occur are with the rights holders — First Nations,” the Chiefs of Ontario said in a media statement.
“Pan-Indigenous approaches do not work and only devalue the true rights holders.”
© 2025 The Canadian Press
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Landlord says B.C. billionaire’s plan for Bay properties ‘defies commercial common sense’

Cadillac Fairview says a plan from a B.C. billionaire hoping to take over 25 former Hudson’s Bay leases “defies commercial common sense” and thus, she should not be allowed to move in.
In filings made with the Ontario Superior Court on Saturday, Cadillac Fairview says it is “resolutely opposed” to Ruby Liu becoming a tenant at some of its malls because she has no detailed or credible business plan.
The mall owner also says Liu, who owns three B.C. shopping centres herself, has no brand, experienced staff or track record in retail.
Her business is “an empty shell without any guarantee of financial means beyond Ms. Liu’s bare assertion that she will keep it afloat,” said Rory MacLeod, Cadillac Fairview’s executive vice-president of operations, in an affidavit. “All of the indications are that (her company) will run out of money before the first store opens.”
MacLeod’s affidavit ups the ante in a battle that has been festering between Liu and landlords since the Bay announced in May that it had chosen her to buy 28 of its leases. The first three got court approval and were transferred in short order because they were at Liu’s three malls.

The remaining 25, however, have been much more fraught. Those leases cover some of the country’s most prized retail space and came with cheaper rent and very attractive terms for the Bay, which filed for creditor protection under the weight of tremendous debt in March.
For example, the Bay paid $1.3 million in annual rent for 152,420 square feet at Fairview Mall in Toronto, court documents show, which is a fraction of what non-anchor tenants would pay.

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Unable to get most landlords onside with a lease transfer, the Bay asked a court at the end of July to force property owners to accept Liu as a tenant.
Liu and the Bay have until next Tuesday to respond to Cadillac Fairview’s allegations. A judge will hear the matter at the end of the month.
Liu has said she wants to turn the Bay stores she is hoping to buy into her own department store named after herself. She has repeatedly told The Canadian Press her stores will not just offer retail space but also dining, entertainment, kids play and recreation areas.
MacLeod says she’s also talked of outfitting Bay spaces with grocery stores, educational centres, senior’s facilities, robotics and musical performances.
Cadillac Fairview says leases at the six malls she wants from the company — Fairview Mall, Sherway Gardens, Masonville Place and Markville in Ontario, Market Mall and Chinook Centre in Alberta and Richmond Centre in B.C. — don’t allow for anything other than a department store to be operated there.

“Despite her private assurances that she intends to respect the lease terms, Ms. Liu has consistently presented a different idea to the public, one that would not be compatible with the leases,” MacLeod said.
His affidavit also raised concerns with the timelines and budget in her business plan.
Liu has said she will be ready to open at least 20 stores within 180 days of obtaining leases and will spend $120 million on “overdue” repairs to roofs, HVAC systems, washrooms, elevators and escalators and $135 million on initial inventory.
Cadillac Fairview says her proposed timeline is “entirely unrealistic” for a new brand, let alone an established one, and her plan is underfunded based on the high number of repairs properties need and expensive terms suppliers will require her to agree to.
MacLeod estimates the stores will need more than $15.8 million in repairs before the end of 2026 to bring the leases into good standing. By 2027, Liu will need to spend another $5.7 million on repairs, not including taxes, permits or fees for expedited labour.
Over the next 10 years, he estimates Liu will be required to spend at least $43.1 million on the Cadillac Fairview leases alone.
He also took issue with her staffing estimations, which show she will need 1,800 employees to carry out her plan.
If all 1,800 are sales staff that would only leave 64 people on the floor of each of her 28 stores. Macleod said such staffing levels are “inadequate to support a countrywide chain” and “inconsistent with a retail location even a fraction of that size.”
“With my decades of experience in commercial real estate, it is apparent to me and Cadillac Fairview that (Liu) will fail and again leave these stores vacant,” he said.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
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Heat warning issued for large part of Ontario, Quebec

A heat warning has been issued for a large part of Ontario and Quebec, with the hot weather expected to last multiple days, Environment Canada reports.
Daytime highs of 30 to 35 C are expected with the humidex values of 35 to 40 C.
Overnight lows will be cooler but will still hover between 19 to 22 C.

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Temperatures are expected to cool mid-week, which will start to bring an end to the heat, Environment Canada said.
The organization warns that extreme heat can affect everyone’s health and people should check on older adults, especially those living alone and other at-risk people.
Signs of heat exhaustion might include headache, nausea, dizziness, thirst, dark urine and intense fatigue.
Call 911 or your emergency health provider if you, or someone around you, is showing signs of heat stroke, which can include red and hot skin, dizziness, nausea, confusion and change in consciousness.
Environment Canada says heat warnings are issued when very high temperature or humidity conditions are expected to pose an elevated risk of heat illnesses, such as heat stroke or heat exhaustion.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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