If there's one thing that stands out in court documents outlining the RCMP's case against Vice-Admiral Mark Norman, it's the extremely cutthroat nature of military procurement.
The military's second-in-command leaked cabinet secrets to a shipbuilding executive as a means of pressuring the Liberal government to approve a $700-million contract: RCMP.
Some of the Mounties killed in a 2014 massacre in Moncton would have survived had the RCMP complied with labour laws, a Crown prosecutor told a judge Monday, April 24, 2017.
Despite a Senate decision last week that they say could slow the union drive by months, a group aiming to represent Mounties is pressing ahead after signing up almost 10,000 members.
Adults aged 18 and older will be legally allowed to buy and cultivate a limited quantity of marijuana for personal use under a suite of bills introduced on April 13, 2017 by the Liberals.
The RCMP says it is too early to know what effect the legalization of recreational marijuana may have on organized criminal involvement in the illicit pot market.
The official start to British Columbia's election campaign is set to launch Tuesday, but the buses are already rolling and the attack ads and name-calling are shifting into high gear.
The RCMP confirmed on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, that the Mounties use so-called mobile device identifiers, also known as Stingrays, to identify and locate cellphones.
New court documents have pulled back the curtains on one of the military's most closely guarded secrets: why its second highest-ranking officer was suspended in January.
Someone in Ottawa was using a device that mimics a cell phone tower to spy on any user that unwittingly connects to the network, gaining access to data and phone calls on the person's device.