Canadian lawmaker: Single mom's bank account frozen for giving $50 to truckers
Art lMoore
Trudeau targeting protesters with terrorist, drug-trafficking laws
A Canadian single mother with a minimum wage job was caught up in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's crackdown on the Freedom Convoy protest of the government's vaccine mandates, losing access to the money in her bank account because she gave $50 to the truckers, according to a lawmaker.
Mark Strahl, a Conservative party member of Parliament, said the mother, named Briane, made the donation before Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act, the Epoch Times reported. The government now bans donations to the truckers under the nation's anti-money-laundering laws, which typically address terrorism and drug trafficking.
"She hasn’t participated in any other way. Her bank account has now been frozen," said Stahl. "This is who Justin Trudeau is actually targeting with his Emergencies Act orders.”
Strahl responded to media members and Twitter users demanding more details on Briane.
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He wrote on Twitter that "having seen what has been said about her online today and what has been done to other convoy donors in the last weeks I am not going to help you dox her."
"I know who she is and I won’t stop fighting for her.”
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said in a statement that the account-freezing powers under the Emergencies Act pertained to "individuals who were influencers in the illegal protest in Ottawa, and owners and/or drivers of vehicles who did not want to leave the area impacted by the protest."
"At no time, did we provide a list of donors to financial institutions," RCMP said. "We are now working with the banks to build a process to address the accounts that were frozen."
At a news conference on Saturday, Mike Duheme, RCMP deputy commissioner of federal policing, said police had frozen 206 financial products, including bank accounts, and disclosed the information of 56 entities associated with vehicles, individuals and companies. Officials also shared 253 bitcoin addresses with virtual currency exchanges and froze a payment processing account valued at $3.8 million, Duheme said.
Trudeau was asked Monday if regular individuals who donate to the truckers were having their bank accounts frozen.
He said "the measures we put in place are designed and focused on ensuring the people in the current illegal occupations leave."
The prime minister added that if "there are specific cases that Conservative ministers can bring forward to highlight where that is not the case, we would happily look at them and look to resolve them."
Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said the financial sanctions are aimed at protest leaders, and the RCMP "has given to the financial institutions names of leaders and organizers of the protests and of people whose trucks were part of occupations and blockades. That is the only information given, according to the RCMP, that the RCMP has given to financial institutions."
Last Friday, Freeland announced that bank accounts of donors to the trucker protesters had been frozen and online fundraising was being tracked by the government's anti-money-laundering unit. On Thursday evening, key protest leaders Tamara Lich, 47, and Christopher Barber, 46, were arrested as police imposed a "secure zone" with 100 checkpoints around the perimeter to cut off support for the demonstrators.
Lich launched the GoFundMe account that was shut down after it raised millions for participants in the protest.
Conservative Party member Dane Lloyd pointed out to Trudeau that the deputy director of intelligence for FINTRAC, the anti-money-laundering intelligence unit, told Parliament there is no evidence that the funding of the protesters on which the government is cracking down is tied to "ideologically motivated extremism."
He asked Trudeau to explain the basis for the government freezing the accounts of Canadians.
Trudeau didn't answer the question, instead restating is insistence that the invoking of the Emergencies Act doesn't take away the basic rights of citizens guaranteed by the nation's charter.
See Lloyd's exchange with Trudeau:
EDITOR'S NOTE: Last year, America's doctors, nurses and paramedics were celebrated as frontline heroes battling a fearsome new pandemic. Today, under Joe Biden, tens of thousands of these same heroes are denounced as rebels, conspiracy theorists, extremists and potential terrorists. Along with massive numbers of police, firemen, Border Patrol agents, Navy SEALs, pilots, air-traffic controllers, and countless other truly essential Americans, they're all considered so dangerous as to merit termination, their professional and personal lives turned upside down due to their decision not to be injected with the experimental COVID vaccines. Biden's tyrannical mandate threatens to cripple American society – from law enforcement to airlines to commercial supply chains to hospitals. It's already happening. But the good news is that huge numbers of "yesterday's heroes" are now fighting back – bravely and boldly. The whole epic showdown is laid out as never before in the sensational October issue of WND's monthly Whistleblower magazine, titled "THE GREAT AMERICAN REBELLION: 'We will not comply!' COVID-19 power grab ignites bold new era of national defiance."
https://www.wnd.com/2022/02/canadian-lawmaker-single-moms-bank-account-frozen-giving-50-truckers/