Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

    • Lisa Neve

      • Lisa Neve was once Canada’s most dangerous woman. In 1994, she was jailed indefinitely and became one one of only four Canadian women in history to be given a dangerous offender designation. She hasn’t spoken publicly since that dangerous offender status was controversially overturned back in 1999 and she was released.
      globalnews.ca/news/4377498/lisa-neve-senate-human-rights-dangerous-offender/
  1. People also ask

  2. Aug 10, 2018 · Lisa Neve was once labelled the most dangerous woman in Canada. Nearly two decades later, she’s now speaking out about the justice system that nearly put her away for life.

  3. Aug 8, 2018 · Lisa Neve was once Canada's most dangerous woman. In 1994, she was jailed indefinitely and became one one of only four Canadian women in history to be given a dangerous offender designation.

    • Quinn Ohler
    • Monica Proietti, aka "Machine Gun Molly" A Montreal native, Monica Proeitti was arguably fated towards a life of crime. Proeitti's grandmother did some hard time for stealing, and allegedly ran a "crime school" for kids in the neighborhood, and both of her husbands were linked to the underworld, one being Anthony Smith, a Scottish gangster who was deported in 1962, and the other Viateur Tessier, who was jailed in 1966 for armed robbery.
    • Angele Grenier, "The Maple Syrup Rebel" There's an underbelly to the maple syrup industry of Quebec, and right in the thick of it is Angele Grenier, a self-acclaimed smuggler and dealer of Canada's sweetest export.
    • The Heavy Heart Bandit. It takes some serious gumption to rob a bank, and even more when you're doing it solely with your words and no weapon in sight. That's pretty much what the Toronto bank robber known solely as the "heavy heart bandit" accomplished, twice in one day.
    • Wendy Kiu-Sang Leung Yu, "The GTA Cocaine Kingpin" Be honest, probably wouldn't think of any old woman to be able to run an expansive cocaine ring or the like.
  4. Oct 2, 2018 · Soon after his release he began killing again, and in 1995 Crawford was charged in the murders of three missing Indigenous women; Shelley Napope, 16, Eva Taysup, 30, and Calinda Waterhen, 22.

  5. May 18, 2024 · On July 4, 2005, at 35 years old, Homolka was released back into the free embrace of her home country, Canada, with eight conditions. Authorities had mixed opinions about whether she was still a menace to society and a threat to children, the majority of the public wanting nothing to do with her.

    • Jean Campbell
  6. Jun 25, 2014 · Renée Acoby, a beautiful 34-year old Ojibwa woman, mother and poet, also happens to be the fourth female dangerous offender in Canadian history. The third one is Krista Walker, the second one, Lisa Neve, had her sentence overturned and is now a free woman.

  7. Jun 30, 1999 · Lisa Neve, 26, was designated a dangerous offender in 1994, which meant she could be jailed indefinitely. She became one of only two women in Canada labelled a dangerous offender.

  1. People also search for