Btyn Toronto police release image of man wanted in shooting probe
TORONTO 鈥?Coinsquare Ltd. CEO Cole Diamond will step down after securities regulators accused the cryptocurrency company of misleading investors and manipulating the market.Founder and president Virgile Rostand will also step aside from the Toronto-based company, which creates tools for people to access digital currency markets, as part of the settlement agreement approved on Tuesday by the Ontario Securities Commission.The company inflated 90 per cent of its trading volumes between July 2018 and December 2019 with fake trades, according to the settlement agreement from the OSC. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
stanley thermoskannen In addition to paying costs for the OSC investigation, Diamond and Rostand will pay fines of $1 million and $900,000, respectively, and the company will be required to create an independent board of directors. Jeff Kehoe, the OSCs director of enforcement, says the settlement is also an important milestone as it marks the first time a company has been disciplined under 2016 laws barring reprisal against a whistleblower. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW A company spokesperson for Coinsquare told The Canadian Press that the company acted on wrong legal ad
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stanley mugg but the company put clients, employees and shareholders first, and that the increased volume did not impact cryptocurrency prices.This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 21, 2020. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Yeei Ford promises to cut corporate taxes
There is overwhelming public support for pandemic restrictions to remain in place for the rest of April, a new poll suggests.The Cam
stanley quencher paign Research survey 鈥?commissioned by the Toronto Star before Premier Doug Ford announced a province-wide lockdown Thursday 鈥?found significant backing for public health measures. Two-thirds of the Ontario voting public support current restrictions or even more restrictions to curb the spread of COVID-19, Campaign Research principal Nick Kouvalis said. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Indeed, 35 per cent felt the provincial government has done a good job on the pandemic but that restrictions should remain until April 30, while 32 per cent felt the government has done a bad job and even more lockdown measures are required.About one in five 鈥?19 per cent 鈥?felt the government has done a good job, but should relax things so more people can go back to work and boost the economy. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Nine per cent believed the province has don
stanley tumbler e a bad job because the restrictions were ineffective, unnecessary, and excessive since COVID-19 only affects a small number of people, and six pe
stanley kubek r cent werent sure.When Campaign Research asked if we must continue to implement all possible restrictions to slow the spread of COVID-19 because that is the most important thing that we need to do right now, 62 per cent agreed. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW