16X9: Missing in Mexico
Videos
-
16X9: Missing in Mexico
-
Conservative MP says abandoned oil wells could put unemployed energy workers back to work
00:58 | June 14, 2016
-
Alison Azer appeals to PM and to Canada for the return of her four kids
04:08 | May 18, 2016
-
Interview with Saren Azer, the father who illegally took his four children to the Middle East
06:53 | May 18, 2016
-
FULL EPISODE: Saturday, April 23rd 2016
44:36 | April 23, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
00:56 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:52 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:24 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
02:46 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:06 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:16 | April 21, 2016
-
FULL EPISODE: Saturday, April 16TH 2016
44:35 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
02:01 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:44 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:15 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
00:54 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:46 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Pit
01:46 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
00:48 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Pit
01:43 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:51 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:51 | April 20, 2016
-
Questions raised about safety records of men opening N.S. coal mine
03:09 | April 18, 2016
-
Official linked to U.S. mining disaster resigns from Cape Breton mine management team
01:28 | April 18, 2016
-
EXTRA: Healing High
10:50 | April 14, 2016
-
EXTRA: Healing High
01:18 | April 14, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
01:57 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
01:28 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
02:02 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
01:45 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
01:42 | April 13, 2016
-
FULL STORY: Rail Fatigue
11:49 | April 2, 2016
-
16X9: Missing in Mexico
| September 11, 2014
-
Conservative MP says abandoned oil wells could put unemployed energy workers back to work
00:58 | June 14, 2016
-
Alison Azer appeals to PM and to Canada for the return of her four kids
04:08 | May 18, 2016
-
Interview with Saren Azer, the father who illegally took his four children to the Middle East
06:53 | May 18, 2016
-
FULL EPISODE: Saturday, April 23rd 2016
44:36 | April 23, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
00:56 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:52 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:24 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
02:46 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:06 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:16 | April 21, 2016
-
FULL EPISODE: Saturday, April 16TH 2016
44:35 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
02:01 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:44 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:15 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
00:54 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:46 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Pit
01:46 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
00:48 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Pit
01:43 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:51 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind
01:51 | April 20, 2016
-
Questions raised about safety records of men opening N.S. coal mine
03:09 | April 18, 2016
-
Official linked to U.S. mining disaster resigns from Cape Breton mine management team
01:28 | April 18, 2016
-
EXTRA: Healing High
10:50 | April 14, 2016
-
EXTRA: Healing High
01:18 | April 14, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
01:57 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
01:28 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
02:02 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
01:45 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap
01:42 | April 13, 2016
-
FULL STORY: Rail Fatigue
11:49 | April 2, 2016
16X9: Missing in Mexico
Description
September 11, 2014
<strong>WATCH ABOVE: 16x9's "Disappeared"</strong>
<em>16x9 originally aired "Disappeared" on October 26, 2013.</em>
The last sighting of Canadian Diego Hernandez came at precisely 5:34 p.m. on the afternoon of May 8. We know the time because a surveillance camera from a government building across the street in the city of Puerto Vallarta captured the moment.
A municipal police car is seen pulling up to a black 2003 Chevy Trailblazer. Hernandez, 22, was a passenger. The driver was an American named Craig Silva. The two men were on their way to meet an accountant in the Mexican resort city to discuss a possible investment in a martial arts business that Hernandez was starting.
At 5:45, the accountant called Silva to find out what was delaying him. The call went to voice mail. The accountant left a message, which was never received.
Hernandez and Silva vanished without a trace. Their vehicle was found, stripped clean, 100 kilometres away. Within hours, someone using Silva’s ATM card went on a shopping spree.
<strong>READ MORE:</strong> <a href="http://globalnews.ca/news/1347546/a-canadian-disappears-in-mexico-one-year-later/">A Canadian disappears in Mexico: One year later</a>
They bought booze and cigarettes, and tried to buy a wide-screen television in the state capital, Guadalajara. There are even clear photographs of someone using an ATM machine with the card.
Strangely, the authorities have never distributed the photos. When <em>16x9</em> asked why, a senior official told us: “We work a little different than in Canada or the U.S.”
Nevertheless, the disappearances had all the earmarks of an abduction, except for one thing: after nearly six months, there has been no ransom demand.
That worries both families. There are fears that the two men may have joined the ranks of Mexico’s “desaparecidos”—the disappeared, who number 27,000 since the country’s drug wars flared in 2006.
Melissa Canez, Hernandez’s mother who has lived in Puerto Vallarta for three years, believes her son may have been kidnapped by police, and handed over to criminals who wanted a piece of his martial arts business, and were rebuffed.
“I think (the police) were likely paid to pick them up,” she says. She has no hard evidence, except that the two men were seen being frisked by police, with their hands up on the Trailblazer, on the day they disappeared. Municipal police on duty that day in that part of Puerto Vallarta deny any knowledge of this.
<strong>Read more:</strong> <a href="http://globalnews.ca/news/922739/dealing-with-mexican-police-a-guide/">Dealing with Mexican police </a>
And that has sharpened the mystery: Who is holding them? Why were both men taken? Why no ransom note? Why no bodies?
When <em>16x9</em> contacted the Attorney General of Jalisco state Luis Najera, another dark scenario emerged. Najera said that Hernandez was possibly a fugitive from justice—a prime suspect in the killing of an American restaurant owner, Johnny Luhr, in Puerto Vallarta.
That murder happened on May 2, six days before the two men disappeared. Maybe, Najera said, Hernandez and Silva were in hiding from police.
We were later told that state police had arrested a Mexican man, who confessed that Hernandez had killed Luhr over of an unpaid debt. When we met Luhr’s girlfriend, she told us much the same story.
Melissa Canez, however, doesn’t buy any of it.
“I just think it’s ridiculous,” she told us. “Why do they come up with these things? Now that they’re missing all of a sudden, oh, we were watching them for this, and we were watching them for that. Well, really do you have the proof? If you did you would have arrested them (before they disappeared), no?”
She is convinced that police don’t want to find Hernandez or Silva—that they may be covering up some kind of conspiracy.
At the same time, Mexican authorities are concerned about the negative publicity surrounding the case. Early on in their investigation, they asked Melissa not to contact the media about her son, and not to circulate 10,000 missing posters that she had printed. They told her that might jeopardize their investigation.
It might also produce some unwelcome headlines in the Canadian media. Canada tourists and expats contribute heavily to the Mexican economy. There are more than 1.5 million Canadian visits each year to Mexican resort cities, and 50,000 Canadians have homes in the country.
It’s not widely known that at least 30 Canadians have been killed in Mexico since 2006. There are also at least two other Canadian men missing since last March. It’s sensitivity to this kind of news that prompted Attorney-General Najera to fly to Puerto Vallarta, with a full team of aides and bodyguards, to assure <em>16x9</em> that police were working “24 hours a day” to solve the Hernandez mystery.
Hernandez’s mother says that if the authorities seem uncomfortable when asked about Diego’s case, it’s much deserved. “Discomfort is the least they should be going through for what they’re putting us through, for not making the effort they promised they would make.”
<em>Don't miss an encore presentation of 16x9 this Saturday at 7pm. </em>
-
16X9: Missing in Mexico -
Conservative MP says abandoned oil wells could put unemployed energy workers back to work00:58 | June 14, 2016 -
Alison Azer appeals to PM and to Canada for the return of her four kids04:08 | May 18, 2016 -
Interview with Saren Azer, the father who illegally took his four children to the Middle East06:53 | May 18, 2016 -
FULL EPISODE: Saturday, April 23rd 201644:36 | April 23, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind00:56 | April 21, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:52 | April 21, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:24 | April 21, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind02:46 | April 21, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:06 | April 21, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:16 | April 21, 2016 -
FULL EPISODE: Saturday, April 16TH 201644:35 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind02:01 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:44 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:15 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind00:54 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:46 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: The Pit01:46 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind00:48 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: The Pit01:43 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:51 | April 20, 2016 -
EXTRA: Left Behind01:51 | April 20, 2016 -
Questions raised about safety records of men opening N.S. coal mine03:09 | April 18, 2016 -
Official linked to U.S. mining disaster resigns from Cape Breton mine management team01:28 | April 18, 2016 -
EXTRA: Healing High10:50 | April 14, 2016 -
EXTRA: Healing High01:18 | April 14, 2016 -
EXTRA: The Labour Trap01:57 | April 13, 2016 -
EXTRA: The Labour Trap01:28 | April 13, 2016 -
EXTRA: The Labour Trap02:02 | April 13, 2016 -
EXTRA: The Labour Trap01:45 | April 13, 2016 -
EXTRA: The Labour Trap01:42 | April 13, 2016 -
FULL STORY: Rail Fatigue11:49 | April 2, 2016
-
16X9: Missing in Mexico| September 11, 2014
-
Conservative MP says abandoned oil wells could put unemployed energy workers back to work00:58 | June 14, 2016
-
Alison Azer appeals to PM and to Canada for the return of her four kids04:08 | May 18, 2016
-
Interview with Saren Azer, the father who illegally took his four children to the Middle East06:53 | May 18, 2016
-
FULL EPISODE: Saturday, April 23rd 201644:36 | April 23, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind00:56 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:52 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:24 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind02:46 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:06 | April 21, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:16 | April 21, 2016
-
FULL EPISODE: Saturday, April 16TH 201644:35 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind02:01 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:44 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:15 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind00:54 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:46 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Pit01:46 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind00:48 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Pit01:43 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:51 | April 20, 2016
-
EXTRA: Left Behind01:51 | April 20, 2016
-
Questions raised about safety records of men opening N.S. coal mine03:09 | April 18, 2016
-
Official linked to U.S. mining disaster resigns from Cape Breton mine management team01:28 | April 18, 2016
-
EXTRA: Healing High10:50 | April 14, 2016
-
EXTRA: Healing High01:18 | April 14, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap01:57 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap01:28 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap02:02 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap01:45 | April 13, 2016
-
EXTRA: The Labour Trap01:42 | April 13, 2016
-
FULL STORY: Rail Fatigue11:49 | April 2, 2016
16X9: Missing in Mexico
Description
September 11, 2014
<strong>WATCH ABOVE: 16x9's "Disappeared"</strong>
<em>16x9 originally aired "Disappeared" on October 26, 2013.</em>
The last sighting of Canadian Diego Hernandez came at precisely 5:34 p.m. on the afternoon of May 8. We know the time because a surveillance camera from a government building across the street in the city of Puerto Vallarta captured the moment.
A municipal police car is seen pulling up to a black 2003 Chevy Trailblazer. Hernandez, 22, was a passenger. The driver was an American named Craig Silva. The two men were on their way to meet an accountant in the Mexican resort city to discuss a possible investment in a martial arts business that Hernandez was starting.
At 5:45, the accountant called Silva to find out what was delaying him. The call went to voice mail. The accountant left a message, which was never received.
Hernandez and Silva vanished without a trace. Their vehicle was found, stripped clean, 100 kilometres away. Within hours, someone using Silva’s ATM card went on a shopping spree.
<strong>READ MORE:</strong> <a href="http://globalnews.ca/news/1347546/a-canadian-disappears-in-mexico-one-year-later/">A Canadian disappears in Mexico: One year later</a>
They bought booze and cigarettes, and tried to buy a wide-screen television in the state capital, Guadalajara. There are even clear photographs of someone using an ATM machine with the card.
Strangely, the authorities have never distributed the photos. When <em>16x9</em> asked why, a senior official told us: “We work a little different than in Canada or the U.S.”
Nevertheless, the disappearances had all the earmarks of an abduction, except for one thing: after nearly six months, there has been no ransom demand.
That worries both families. There are fears that the two men may have joined the ranks of Mexico’s “desaparecidos”—the disappeared, who number 27,000 since the country’s drug wars flared in 2006.
Melissa Canez, Hernandez’s mother who has lived in Puerto Vallarta for three years, believes her son may have been kidnapped by police, and handed over to criminals who wanted a piece of his martial arts business, and were rebuffed.
“I think (the police) were likely paid to pick them up,” she says. She has no hard evidence, except that the two men were seen being frisked by police, with their hands up on the Trailblazer, on the day they disappeared. Municipal police on duty that day in that part of Puerto Vallarta deny any knowledge of this.
<strong>Read more:</strong> <a href="http://globalnews.ca/news/922739/dealing-with-mexican-police-a-guide/">Dealing with Mexican police </a>
And that has sharpened the mystery: Who is holding them? Why were both men taken? Why no ransom note? Why no bodies?
When <em>16x9</em> contacted the Attorney General of Jalisco state Luis Najera, another dark scenario emerged. Najera said that Hernandez was possibly a fugitive from justice—a prime suspect in the killing of an American restaurant owner, Johnny Luhr, in Puerto Vallarta.
That murder happened on May 2, six days before the two men disappeared. Maybe, Najera said, Hernandez and Silva were in hiding from police.
We were later told that state police had arrested a Mexican man, who confessed that Hernandez had killed Luhr over of an unpaid debt. When we met Luhr’s girlfriend, she told us much the same story.
Melissa Canez, however, doesn’t buy any of it.
“I just think it’s ridiculous,” she told us. “Why do they come up with these things? Now that they’re missing all of a sudden, oh, we were watching them for this, and we were watching them for that. Well, really do you have the proof? If you did you would have arrested them (before they disappeared), no?”
She is convinced that police don’t want to find Hernandez or Silva—that they may be covering up some kind of conspiracy.
At the same time, Mexican authorities are concerned about the negative publicity surrounding the case. Early on in their investigation, they asked Melissa not to contact the media about her son, and not to circulate 10,000 missing posters that she had printed. They told her that might jeopardize their investigation.
It might also produce some unwelcome headlines in the Canadian media. Canada tourists and expats contribute heavily to the Mexican economy. There are more than 1.5 million Canadian visits each year to Mexican resort cities, and 50,000 Canadians have homes in the country.
It’s not widely known that at least 30 Canadians have been killed in Mexico since 2006. There are also at least two other Canadian men missing since last March. It’s sensitivity to this kind of news that prompted Attorney-General Najera to fly to Puerto Vallarta, with a full team of aides and bodyguards, to assure <em>16x9</em> that police were working “24 hours a day” to solve the Hernandez mystery.
Hernandez’s mother says that if the authorities seem uncomfortable when asked about Diego’s case, it’s much deserved. “Discomfort is the least they should be going through for what they’re putting us through, for not making the effort they promised they would make.”
<em>Don't miss an encore presentation of 16x9 this Saturday at 7pm. </em>
National News
-
Black Loyalists’ history added to Canada’s Memory of the World2:177 hours ago -
Middle East war benefits Russia, leaves Ukraine in limbo2:097 hours ago -
Alberta sees massive spike in oil royalties amid Iran conflict2:177 hours ago -
Iran fires long-range ballistic missiles at UK-US base in Indian Ocean2:117 hours ago -
Global National: March 2122:047 hours ago -
Canadians plan to sail to Gaza despite detention risks0:518 hours ago -
Supreme Court of Canada agrees to hear challenge against federal firearms ban6:099 hours ago -
BTS makes comeback as K-pop group reunites in Seoul after military service1:5610 hours ago -
Indigenous identity researcher ordered to pay $70,000 in defamation suit1:509 hours ago -
Beef prices in Canada hit record high as supply shortages drive costs up5:419 hours ago
Advertisement
Top News
-
Iran threatens tourist sites worldwide amid Middle East conflict0:342 days ago -
Chuck Norris, martial arts icon and movie star, dead at 860:332 days ago -
Eid celebrations begin as Ramadan ends4:562 days ago -
Canada and allies say they could ‘contribute’ efforts on Strait of Hormuz0:362 days ago -
Roméo Dallaire says war in Sudan needs intervention2:032 days ago -
Iran war: Growing unease over Trump administration’s timeline to end U.S. attacks2:002 days ago -
Middle East war spreads to Gulf oil and gas sites2:172 days ago -
Middle East war disrupts global helium supply1:582 days ago -
Iran’s regime strikes Gulf energy infrastructure as conflict with US, Israel escalates2:292 days ago -
‘Canada’s got to be ready’: Feds announce $307M contract for Canadian-made assault rifles3:182 days ago
Sponsored Content
Global National
-
Global National: March 2122:047 hours ago -
Global National: March 2021:451 day ago -
Global National: March 1921:552 days ago -
Global National: March 1821:503 days ago -
Global National: March 1721:564 days ago -
Global National: March 1621:155 days ago -
Global National: March 1520:116 days ago -
Global National: March 1421:251 week ago -
Global National: March 1322:021 week ago -
Global National: March 1221:591 week ago
Trending
-
Majority of Americans do not want to send ground troops to Iran, poll finds2:021 day ago -
Indigenous identity researcher ordered to pay $70,000 in defamation suit1:509 hours ago -
Ottawa to cut science, tourism and foreign aid as government restructures spending2:229 hours ago -
‘Because I Got High’ rapper, Afroman, wins legal battle against Ohio police2:2014 hours ago -
Black Loyalists’ history added to Canada’s Memory of the World2:177 hours ago -
Josh Duggar reacts to brother Joseph’s arrest on child molestation charges0:451 day ago -
Canada has ‘no intention’ of joining Iran war, was ‘not consulted’ by US, Israel before: McGuinty3:454 days ago
Canada
-
Ottawa proposing to cut billions in funding from science to tourism and foreign aid2:211 day ago -
Alberta disability advocates call for more supports amid MAID changes2:021 day ago -
Alberta promises primary care access funding for Indigenous communities1:151 day ago -
Edmonton extortion fears remain: ‘People are still out there’1:491 day ago -
Alberta distillers, government blazing a new ‘whisky trail’1:571 day ago -
CFIA slaps grocery stores with hefty fines for ‘misleading’ Product of Canada labels0:422 days ago -
Health Matters: Wagner 900 Series power steamers recalled due to burn hazard2:212 days ago -
Toronto Comicon returns with 35th anniversary celebration of TMNT movie2:012 days ago -
Business Matters: January retail sales in Canada up 1.1 per cent2:172 days ago -
Canada slips in World Happiness Report rankings5:262 days ago
U.S. News
-
Hollywood star and tough guy meme, Chuck Norris, dead at 862:0814 hours ago -
Majority of Americans do not want to send ground troops to Iran, poll finds2:021 day ago -
Trump says Strait of Hormuz will ‘open itself’ eventually1:091 day ago -
U.S. ‘big winners’ for importing Canadian resources, Poilievre tells Harvard Club1:542 days ago -
Takeaways from Poilievre’s appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast2:042 days ago -
Contrasting national park plans pit Canada against the United States2:142 days ago -
‘Americans love Canada!’: Poilievre speaks to media during U.S. trip0:273 days ago -
Trump’s Cuba threats raise global tensions7:002 days ago -
U.S. intelligence chief Gabbard grilled over Trump’s war on Iran2:122 days ago -
Streaking meteor seen in multiple U.S. states1:194 days ago
Advertisement
World
-
BTS makes comeback as K-pop group reunites in Seoul after military service1:5610 hours ago -
Global News Hour at 6 BC: March 2020:261 day ago -
U.S. considers seizure of Iran’s Kharg Island2:071 day ago -
Alberta farmers face uncertainty with rising fertilizer prices2:081 day ago -
Trump says Strait of Hormuz will ‘open itself’ eventually1:091 day ago -
Eid al-Fitr celebrations begin worldwide as communities gather in prayer and reflection3:151 day ago -
Iran threatens tourist sites worldwide amid Middle East conflict0:342 days ago -
Eid celebrations begin as Ramadan ends4:562 days ago -
Canada and allies say they could ‘contribute’ efforts on Strait of Hormuz0:362 days ago -
Roméo Dallaire says war in Sudan needs intervention2:032 days ago
Politics
-
New addendum shows millions of dollars unaccounted for in AHS procurement scandal2:147 hours ago -
Premier Danielle Smith says scrapping the fuel tax wouldn’t fully help with high gas prices1:447 hours ago -
CAQ hopefuls Fréchette and Drainville face off in first leadership debate0:548 hours ago -
Focus Ontario: Is the Premier Protecting Ontario?22:538 hours ago -
Ottawa to cut science, tourism and foreign aid as government restructures spending2:229 hours ago -
Information and Privacy Commissioner questions Ford government transparency claims5:279 hours ago -
Ontario premier Doug Ford calls on B.C. to scrap EV mandate4:3414 hours ago -
Alberta promises primary care access funding for Indigenous communities1:1514 hours ago -
Global News Hour at 6 BC: March 2020:261 day ago -
Global National: March 2021:451 day ago
Health and Wellness
-
Alberta disability advocates call for more supports amid MAID changes2:021 day ago -
Alberta promises primary care access funding for Indigenous communities1:151 day ago -
‘The Pitt’ season two showcases Canadian innovation with made-in-Canada Rescue cutter4:092 days ago -
Mother desperate for funding for life-saving treament for son2:562 days ago -
N.B. woman without a family doctor shares her traumatic miscarriage experience3:052 days ago -
Health Matters: Alberta takes new steps to restrict MAID access2:372 days ago -
Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital staff sounding alarm over crumbling facility2:252 days ago -
Alberta proposes new limits on Medical Assistance in Dying under Bill 186:423 days ago -
Majority of Canadians support MAID for mental illness patients, research says1:573 days ago -
Facing time-sensitive cancers during Brain Awareness Week4:534 days ago
Advertisement
Investigative News
-
Report: Lytton wildfire rebuild lacked framework2:154 days ago -
Deportation hearing begins for alleged Iranian regime official1:385 days ago -
Questions about how Tumbler Ridge shooter had access to guns2:301 month ago -
Deportation hearing for suspected high-ranking Iranian official living in Canada held behind closed doors0:451 month ago -
Battling extortion violence in Surrey7:132 months ago -
Fighting the addictions crisis in northern Manitoba’s Nisichawayasihk Cree Nation5:023 months ago -
‘They can shoot me’: Fear-stricken Ontario family speaks after Bishnoi gang violence in Canada2:513 months ago -
Government responds to allegations of widespread fraud at Social Development and Poverty Reduction ministry3:304 months ago -
Ontario’s landfill crisis: The cost of inaction2:534 months ago -
Russian snipers using Canadian rifles in Ukraine despite sanctions2:385 months ago
News Bloopers
-
‘Amoosing’ cow leaves Global News Morning crew in stitches1:593 months ago -
‘Can’t use that on TV’: Watch a Global News reporter jump from the highest bungee jump in Canada0:3711 months ago -
Black bear in tree has rough landing after being tranquilized at Halifax-area park0:4918 months ago -
Edmonton, B.C. morning show hosts settle NHL playoff bet3:0522 months ago -
‘You can’t make this stuff up:’ Loud clap of thunder interrupts live TV segment at pivotal moment0:2530 months ago -
Fun times? Global News personalities help clear snow in search of ‘fun’ story2:0041 months ago -
‘Buzzworthy moment’: Colin D’Mello recaps Doug Ford accidentally swallowing a bee1:5743 months ago -
‘Did you just call me daddy?’: Morning show hosts can’t hold back laughter after on-air mixup1:1544 months ago -
B.C. dad hoping to see his cloud photo on TV get his wish following viral TikTok campaign2:1247 months ago -
Bloopers: Phil Darlington slips, slides and falls in these Our Winter City outtakes1:3841 months ago