Neighbours told RCMP they heard car near trailer where Nova Scotia children disappeared | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Lindsay Jones, Greg Mercer
Publication Date: October 17, 2025 - 20:28

Neighbours told RCMP they heard car near trailer where Nova Scotia children disappeared

October 17, 2025

Two neighbours told the RCMP they heard a vehicle coming and going near the trailer where Jack and Lilly Sullivan lived in the early hours of the morning, shortly before they were reported missing, recently unredacted court documents say.

The missing persons case of Jack, 4, and Lilly Sullivan, 6, has been the focus of an intensive major crime investigation for the past five months. In that time, police cadaver dogs have scoured the children’s rural Nova Scotia home and nearby areas for human remains, and extensive searches have been conducted using helicopters, drones and hundreds of volunteers.



Unpublished Newswire

 
In the fall of 1964, the producers of a national television newsmagazine called This Hour Has Seven Days started a revolution at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. According to the manifesto with which the program began its first broadcast, the new program would “probe hypocrisy,” right “public wrongs,” “grill . . . prominent guests,” and, in the process, create “journalism of . . . such urgency that it will become mandatory viewing for a large segment of the nation.” The CBC’s top executives in Ottawa were immediately alarmed....
October 21, 2025 - 06:30 | David Cayley | Walrus
Good morning. The Blue Jays are going to the World Series. More on that below, along with the work to dig out Gaza from 60 million tonnes of rubble and the latest on the Louvre jewel heist. But first:Today’s headlinesA U.S.-Canada trade deal could be ready for approval at the APEC summit, sources sayThe federal budget will include a new agency to tackle money laundering and online fraudIn a groundbreaking procedure, doctors perform a rare heart surgery on a pregnant woman
October 21, 2025 - 06:30 | Danielle Groen | The Globe and Mail
Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home—so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any map of the world.— Eleanor Roosevelt One person. One name. I learned that from the people of Djorlo. In 2006, as genocidal violence in Sudan’s Darfur region spilled into neighbouring Chad, I spent several weeks with an Amnesty International research team travelling along the Chadian side of that troubled border, documenting the impact of a string of brutal attacks against isolated villages that had left a macabre trail of death, destruction, and fear...
October 21, 2025 - 06:29 | Alex Neve | Walrus