BRINGING LOCAL EXPERTISE AND BRITISH COLUMBIA WOOD TO CHINA UFV program provides training to visiting Chinese students
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Terrorized husband and wife BY PAUL J. HENDERSON phenderson@chilliwacktimes.com
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he second of three men who took part in a violent home invasion in Chilliwack was sentenced in BC Supreme Court on Aug. 22. Justice Brian Joyce gave Steven Tkachuk four years in jail for the 2012 breakand-enter where a sleeping couple were terrorized and robbed in their home. Tkachuk was given one-and-a-half times credit for time served, which amounted to 997 days. That means the 45-year-old will serve a further one year and 98 days in custody. The incident involved Tkachuk, David Lee Ganaway, 31, and Marc Cadieux, 42, breaking into a home where a couple was asleep. The trio proceeded to beat the husband, threaten the wife and steal a significant amount of jewelry and cash from a safe. The couple also had family videos stolen and discarded. But worst of all, they were traumatized and have suffered mentally and emotionally. “It’s callous to terrorize people this way in their own home,” Crown Counsel Grant Lindsey told the court during a sentencing hearing in July. Tkachuk’s lawyer, Gurpreet Gill, had asked for three years in custody minus time served. Gill said Tkachuk felt remorse, is a hard-working man, and was duped into the crime thinking he was helping his co-accused, Cadieux, to pay off a debt. Gill also argued during the trial and again at the sentencing hearing that her client did not think anyone would be in the house when the plan was hatched.
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No sport in this salmon fishery
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Walk Leading by example { Page A26 }
When the sockeye run, experienced anglers stay away BY PAUL J. HENDERSON phenderson@chilliwacktimes.com
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Greg Laychak/TIMES
Ray Regnier cleans a golf club at Cultus Lake Golf Club Saturday to help raise money for the upcoming Parkinson’s Superwalk. Regnier himself lives with Parkinson’s.
ne of the great ironies of recreational sockeye fishing in the Fraser River is that in a season of large returns such as this year’s, many “real” anglers stay away. For sport fishers who hit the waters 12 months of the year, week in week out, rain or shine, the idea is simple: put out a lure of some kind on a hook and try to get a wild fish to bite it. But what’s going on right now at places like Peg Leg Bar bears no resemblance to true sport fishing, according to many practitioners. “It’s not sport fishing,” says local recreational fisherman Matthew Hawkins who does equipment reviews and fishing podcasts with his partner Ryan Enns on their website, fishingguys.ca. “We call it a meat harvest.” When there are literally millions of sockeye swimming past places like Peg Leg the quadrennial anglers come out of the woodwork and practise a technique known as “bottom bouncing” or “flossing.” { See SOCKEYE, page A3 }
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