Society's Child
Dakota Pratt, 28, was sentenced on Thursday to five years in prison, after a jury at Brandon's Court of Queen's Bench found him guilty in April of manslaughter in the attack that killed Vincent Bunn.
Court heard Bunn, 21, entered Pratt's home on the Birdtail Sioux First Nation, about 115 kilometres northwest of Brandon, Man., in the early morning of Sept. 2, 2016.
Pratt, who was asleep in a basement bedroom, awoke to a "feeling of being stabbed" in the head, court heard. He got up and found a knife-wielding intruder in his room and - not knowing who the person was - chased him into the hallway.
Leyla Cox, 53, of New Brighton, New York, was found dead reportedly of a heart attack in her hotel room in June, according to her son William Cox, the Staten Island Advance reported.
"I am overwhelmed and confused and in shock," William Cox, 25, told the news outlet Thursday. "I have a right to be suspicious."
Leyla Cox joins a growing list of U.S. tourists who have died in the Dominican Republic under similar circumstances over the past year. She was vacationing alone, according to her son, having arrived on June 5 to celebrate her 53rd birthday. It is not known what hotel resort she was staying in.

Police retreat under a cloud of tear gas as protesters disperse from the scene of a standoff Wednesday in Memphis.
A driver wanted on multiple felony warrants attempted to ram law enforcement vehicles when officers with a regional U.S. Marshals Service fugitive task force attempted to arrest him in Memphis' Frayser community at about 7 p.m., Tennessee Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman Keli McAlister said.
The man then got out of the vehicle with a weapon, according to McAlister.
"The officers fired, striking and killing the individual," she said. No officers were injured in the incident, she said.
The man was later identified as Brandon Webber, 20, state law enforcement officials told NBC affiliate WMC-TV.

People protest outside the court, where Julian Assange was sentenced, in London. May 1, 2019.
"I don't believe that the press in this country believes in free speech. This is one of the most compliant presses in the world, especially when it comes to foreign policy," Kovalik said on Thursday. "They are unquestioning of the US' eternal war footing and that is exactly what Assange has challenged and that is why they have taken great umbrage at Assange."
Pointing out that the American press was responsible for spreading the "weapons of mass destruction" and Gulf of Tonkin disinformation that served as pretexts for wars in Iraq and Vietnam, he added that Assange's own willingness to "challenge those types of lies" makes US journalists "ashamed," so they attack him at every opportunity.
Speaking outside Westminster Magistrates' Court in London on Friday following the decision to open a new, full US extradition hearing in February 2020, Pilger insisted that the motivation of the American authorities in pursuing Assange was clear to see.
... [It] is quite clear that on a wider level this is an attempt to shut down WikiLeaks and put Assange away, but it's also about shutting down dissent. It's mainly about shutting down investigative journalism.
Comment: See also:
- 'Assange extradition should be warning to liberals who believe in American democracy' - Zizek
- Julian Assange's father comforts his son in emotional jail visit - will be moving to UK to support the WikiLeaks founder
- It's happening: UK Home Secretary approves extradition request for Assange to stand trial in the USA on charges of 'spying'
The Slovenian sociologist told RT that signing of the extradition order is just one of two recent events that really worry him. The other "ominous" event was the Ecuadorian government's invitation to US authorities to take possession of Assange's property from its London embassy when he was taken to prison, including book manuscripts, computers and other personal possessions.
"The nightmare is that the accuser was directly invited to take possession of all these documents. This breaks even the elementary the norms of legality," Zizek explained.
"The message is, 'Yes, we will be brutal beyond measure.'"

Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks during the 2019 California Democratic Party State Organizing Convention in San Francisco, Saturday, June 1, 2019.
California is on the verge of becoming the first state in the country to give free health care to adult illegal immigrants. Using the state Medi-Cal program, which offers free or low-cost health coverage for those with limited incomes, the state estimates this will provide free health care to what they believe is 100,000 illegal immigrants between the ages of 19 and 25 years old.
A Washington Examiner editorial noted, "California wants to look after its people, so it keeps expanding its social safety net. It also wants to welcome all comers and so embraces illegal immigrants and protects them in sanctuary cities. To see how this is working out, visit Skid Row in L.A. or neighborhoods in San Francisco or elsewhere where homeless camps are spreading. ... Just as California lacks enough homes to house its inhabitants, so it also lacks enough doctors to care for them. The additional budget bloat on health care will worsen that shortage."

Lawyer Michael Avenatti speaks as he departs federal court in the Manhattan borough of New York, New York, U.S., May 28, 2019.
Geoffrey Johnson is seeking at least $9.5 million, plus punitive damages, from Avenatti and several former colleagues in his civil lawsuit filed with the Orange County Superior Court in California.
"I never thought I would get victimized by my own attorney," Johnson, who uses a wheelchair, said at a press conference on Thursday. "I wish he had just given me my money."
Johnson's claims are also part of federal prosecutors' criminal case against Avenatti, who has pleaded not guilty to wire fraud, bank fraud, extortion and other charges, including defrauding other clients, in California and New York.
San Ysidro High School senior Nataly Buhr opened her June 6 speech in typical fashion - thanking her parents for their "endless love," acknowledging the memories shared with her friends, and mentioning a handful of teachers for being 'invested in the students.'
Then, Buhr went scorched earth.
Comment: Good for Ms. Buhr. It was hard-won, but she's got a head start in making a success of herself both in self-reliance and speaking her mind.
A number of car tires were slashed and red graffiti was sprayed on the Al-Arbaeen Shahid mosque, the village health clinic, a house and on cars, the Einbus City Council said.
Comment: When an illegal Israeli squatter gets off scot free in the murder of a baby, then anything else seems possible.
- Israelis torch Palestinians' cars in West Bank
- Palestinian toddler burned to death in suspected Jewish 'price tag' attack
- Extremists deface headstones in Jerusalem Muslim cemetery with Stars of David
- Immoral, unacceptable: Herd mentality, racism, lynching alive and well in Israel
- Israel's ugly Jews: Religious, nationalistic thuggery becomes trademark of indifferent Israeli society











Comment: See also: What in the world is going on in the Dominican Republic? (Update)