Friday, February 27, 2009

DAWN MCSWEENEY AND ALEX LAVERGNE: REWARD



I am offering a reward for information about Dawn McSweeney of NDG and Pierrefonds and Alex Lavergne of Montreal.

Please contact Marlene Jennings M.P. at Tel: 514-489-8703, Irwin Cotler, M.P. at Tel: 514-283-0171, or Beryl Wajsman, editor of The Suburban Weekly newspaper at Tel: 514-484-1107.

The specifics about the reward will depend on the final outcome of this case and how valuable the information will have been to that outcome.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

4995 PRINCE OF WALES - CRIME SCENE

Scene of the Crimes: 4995 Prince of Wales, NDG, Montreal, Quebec

Time: October 7, 1996

The Thief: Dawn McSweeney and her "partners in crime" as she calls them on her blog.

The Victims: Phyllis Carter and the Rubin Family

All the details of these crimes have been reported to the Montreal Police repeatedly since October 7, 1996. The Montreal Police do nothing.

Along with seven pages of precious inventory, Dawn McSweeney also stole my oil paintings that
were still on the walls at 4995 Prince of Wales on the day I was attacked there, and evicted empty-handed by a Montreal Police Officer - without benefit of any legal procedure and with no justification but the word of my attacker. (Read all the details below)

Dawn McSweeney and her "partners in crime" stole my father's books - Leaves of Grass, The Iliad, classics, mysteries, art -books my father enjoyed and cherished. I could go online and find some of these titles and buy them, but it would never be the same. The thieves stole our family's heritage.

Dawn McSweeney and her associates stole our family home, family photographs, jewellery, personal treasures, gifts, our memories, our souvenirs - our peace, our family. The robbery shattered our family and then their crimes continued because no one would stop them. But as our quest for justice accelerates, others are becoming more interested in knowing why the so-called justice system has allowed these criminals to continue enjoying the spoils of their deeds, and some people are beginning to ask questions of our political leaders.

I continue to fight for what is my own, for that which belongs to my siblings.

I will never stop fighting for justice.


Phyllis Carter