CTV National News Chief Anchor Lisa LaFlamme inducted to Order of Ontario
Lisa LaFlamme, chief anchor and senior editor of CTV National News, has been appointed to the Order of Ontario, the province’s highest honour.
Lisa LaFlamme, chief anchor and senior editor of CTV National News, has been appointed to the Order of Ontario, the province’s highest honour.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says national intelligence agencies and local police forces are doing “everything necessary” to keep Canadians safe when they celebrate Canada’s 150th anniversary in Ottawa and across the country Saturday.
The Liberal government finished its parliamentary year without moving ahead on a bill to eliminate a Criminal Code ban on anal sex, despite promising further legislation to correct historic wrongs against gay Canadians.
The deputy commander of Canadian special forces says the sniper who shattered the record for the longest confirmed kill also saved lives.
On Saturday, July 1, CTV News Chief Anchor Lisa LaFlamme will lead CTV’s coverage of the Canada Day celebration in Ottawa. The celebration will air live and commercial-free on the CTV main network, CTV News Channel and CTVNews.ca, beginning at 1100 ET / 0800 PT.
Swimming lessons for young children can result in parents who are too confident about the youngster’s ability to keep from drowning, says a child safety expert.
A British Transport Police officer who fought off three extremists in London's Borough Market with only a baton thought he was going to die after being stabbed multiple times.
The massive aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower, one of the largest weapons in the arsenal of the United States military, is steaming toward Halifax for a rare visit that will include a stopover extending to Canada Day.
A man who threw a beer can onto the field during a dramatic Blue Jays playoff game last fall has been given a conditional discharge.
A daredevil who died after plunging over Niagara Falls in an apparent stunt with an inflatable ball might have brought a boa constrictor along for the ride.
The Supreme Court of Canada has upheld a ruling that ordered popular search engine Google to wipe out references to a discredited company.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recently paid a surprise visit to the set of 'X-Men: Dark Phoenix' in Montreal, where he posed for a photo with several members of the cast.
A search is on in Edmonton for the woman who made off with a lawn statue in a 'brazen' theft that was captured on the home's surveillance video.
Fans of Tim Hortons’ popular “Roll Up The Rim To Win” contest won’t have to wait until next winter to try their luck again. The coffee chain has introduced a special edition of the game to coincide with Canada’s 150th birthday celebrations, and Canadians are pretty excited about it.
A 32-year-old man will face 'a cascade of charges' following an alleged crime spree that culminated in a dramatic car chase on a Toronto-area highway Wednesday morning.
Police have arrested a shooting suspect after a pursuit on a highway north of Toronto. Toronto police say a woman was shot and a man assaulted in the north end of the city at about 6:30 a.m. Wednesday.
A co-founder of a Calgary oil and gas company was sentenced to five years in prison Tuesday after pleading guilty to fraud for stealing close to $5 million from the company.
Many people are talking about the 'Merc with a Mouth' in downtown Vancouver, as shooting gets underway for local boy Ryan Reynolds' blockbuster superhero sequel, 'Deadpool 2.'
The fate of Derek Saretzky, a man charged with killing a father, his toddler and a senior in southwestern Alberta is expected to be handed over to a jury today.
It took an Alberta jury just three hours Wednesday to convict Derek Saretzky, 24, of the horrific murders of a 69-year-old woman, a young father and his two-year-old daughter. Jurors recommended Saretzky be kept in prison for at least the next 75 years.
The fate of a man charged with killing a father, his young daughter and a senior in southwestern Alberta is now in the hands of a jury.
The data-scrambling software epidemic that paralyzed computers globally is under control in Ukraine, where it likely originated, officials said Wednesday, as companies and governments around the world counted the cost of a crisis that is disrupting ports, hospitals and factories.
A new, highly virulent strain of malicious software that is crippling computers globally appears to have been sown in Ukraine, where it badly hobbled much of the government and private sector on the eve of a holiday celebrating a post-Soviet constitution.
A fibre-optic probe can detect errant cancer cells within healthy tissue during brain tumour surgery with close to 100 per cent accuracy and sensitivity, reducing the risk of recurrence and thereby increasing a patient's survival time, say Canadian researchers.
More than 500,000 revellers are expected to flock to Parliament Hill Saturday to celebrate Canada’s 150th anniversary, and heightened security will be in place across the capital to ensure the party goes off without a hitch.