Canadian police file new charges over sale of suicide substances

Canadian police file new charges over sale of suicide substances

Over 1,200 suicide-assistance packages were allegedly sent out to more than 40 countries.

12 new charges, including counselling or aiding suicide, were filed against the accused, Kenneth Law. (Wikimedia Commons pic)
MONTREAL:
Canadian police filed 12 new charges on Tuesday against a man accused of selling a substance online to assist people with suicides, potentially sending more than a thousand packages across dozens of countries.

Authorities suspect Kenneth Law, 57, of marketing the substance, often used as a food additive, to people at risk of self-harm online.

The announcement comes after police in the UK said on Friday that they were investigating 88 deaths there linked to substances sold by Canadian websites.

The new charges filed on Tuesday of “counselling or aiding suicide” bring the total against Law to 14, all of which stem from cases around the Canadian province of Ontario, inspector Simon James of the York Regional Police said.

“The victims were Ontario residents. They were both male and female between the ages of 16 and 36 years of age,” James told a press conference.

James on Tuesday said over 1,200 packages may have been sent out to more than 40 countries.

“We don’t know what all those packages contained,” said James, noting that approximately 160 packages had been sent within Canada.

Law was arrested by police in early May. Police at the time alleged that he had “distributed and marketed the substance online to target individuals at risk of self-harm.”

He is currently in custody awaiting trial at the Ontario Court of Justice in Newmarket.

Several parallel investigations are also underway in the US, Italy, Australia, and New Zealand, according to British media reports.

“We’re communicating and sharing info with police services from all over the world,” said James.

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