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The bloodshed doesn't stop on Port Union Road. or Steeles Avenue.
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Murder is a national nightmare, and its tentacles do not touch anywhere.
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On Wednesday, the BOLO program released its annual Most Wanted list, which includes Canada's 25 Biggest Dirtbags and Mine Sun colleague Chris Doucette focused on the worst of Toronto. Hometown heroes made up about 25% of the BOLO squad. However, there are other disadvantages.

While many of the killers are gangsters, 32-year-old Dharam Dhaliwal is not one of them. He was a violent thug who beat his domestic partner, 21-year-old Pavanpreet Kaur, for months and was arrested several times, according to Peel Regional Police.
On December 3, 2022, Kaur was shot and killed at the Mississauga Petro-Canada plant where she worked. Dhaliwal allegedly faked his suicide and is now on the run with a Canada-wide warrant for first-degree murder hanging over his head.
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Among the 25 suspects listed on Team BOLO, there is only one woman. Catherine Bergeron-Pinsarrone, 27, from Mississauga (and Quebec!), is wanted for second-degree murder in the August 8, 2024 stabbing death of a 16-year-old boy from Montreal in York Region.

At the Overtime sports bar in Sudbury, there were words, then bullets. And when the smoke cleared on April 21, 2023, 22-year-old Joe Cabigon died from a gunshot wound. Toronto cops detained the 16-year-old alleged shooter, and a 41-year-old Sudbury man was also arrested as the getaway driver (and a small arsenal of drugs).
But the guy the cops want for first-degree murder (participant in the crime) is charming 19-year-old Noah Singh, who flies with the wind. In addition to murder, there are a number of weapons charges, conspiracy, menacing, and our old favorite, probation violation.
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And just in case you think Ottawa is nothing more than a small army of overpaid bureaucrats burning through your money, think again. There are some enterprising young guys in the nation's capital.
On May 28, 2021, police were called to Ottawa's busy Alta Vista shopping center after reports of multiple gunshots. Officers found two men shot and a third with non-life-threatening injuries. Investigators have charged three people with two counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder. Two were arrested.

Mohamed “Waldo” Chaire, 36, did not and has now been issued an Interpol Red Notice for his arrest. His last known location was in Toronto, but he is believed to have fled to Somalia.
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In a column last year, I noted that the death of 33-year-old Jama Roble, cut to death in a hail of bullets in Ottawa's Little Italy, was entirely predictable. In Regina there was sex trafficking, sexual assault, common assault and sexual assault with a weapon, followed by four years in federal prison.

Then, in March 2021, Roble returned to duty in the nation's capital. Roble and his 21-year-old girlfriend allegedly shot and killed a 65-year-old man at Byward Market in what was described as a “targeted incident”. Police said Roble was “armed and dangerous.”
What guys like Jama Roble never realize is that the counter ticks on their watch the minute they pick up a gun. There's no gold watch, Antique Day or Outlaw Hall of Fame here.
Instead, on January 29, 2024, Jama Robl got his ticket punched. Cops say Jibril Bakal, 31, of Edmonton, is wanted for first-degree murder. He also has a drug and firearms resume.
And it looks like he's been gone for a long time. For now.
If you know the whereabouts of anyone on the BOLO list, contact your local police or Crime Stoppers.
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