Oakville Beaver, 21 Mar 2019, p. 16

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in si de ha lto n. co m O ak vi lle B ea ve r | T hu rs da y, M ar ch 21 ,2 01 9 | 16 The 1Awards want to help your business grow faster. Enter your Hamilton, Burlington or Oakville business online at 1Awards.ca for a chance to win a share in up to $25k in cash and $125k of industry leading expertise. Halton police are inves- tigating following break- ins to two Oakville apart- ment complexes on Mon- day, March 11. At around 5 p.m., two suspects were able to en- ter a locked apartment building on Lynnwood Drive, near Trafalgar Road. Police said there was no forced entry meaning theforced entry meaning thef intruders either had a key fob or waited for someonefob or waited for someonef to leave the door open. The individuals at- tempted to get into an apartment unit but fled when they realized the tenant was present. The suspects are de- scribed as male, wearing hoodies that covered their faces and gloves.faces and gloves.f A second break-in was reported at a nearby apartment complex on Marlborough Court on Monday, March 11. At some point during the day three suspects broke the door and lock of an apartment unit and stole a laptop from inside valued at $1,000. No one was home at the time of the break-in. The first suspect is de- scribed as female, black, with a heavy build. She wore a Nike hoodie with a small logo on the left chest and a large white Nike logo diagonally across the back, and dark coloured pants. She attempted to con- ceal her face by wearing her hood up and a bandana or scarf over her mouth. The two other individu- als are described as male, wearing grey hoodies, dark gloves, black pants and black shoes. Police are also looking for the individual respon-for the individual respon-f sible for a failed break-in to a home on Pinegrove Road, near Weighton Drive, on Friday, March 8. At around 9:30 a.m., the residence's alarm went off. The homeowner was present. No suspect was seen, and nothing was taken. Police said someone ap- pears to have attempted to break into the house but fled when the alarm wentfled when the alarm wentf off. Anyone with informa- tion about any of these in- cidents is asked to contact Halton police at 905-825- 4747 ext. 2216 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477). POLICE LOOKING FOR SUSPECTS FOLLOWING BREAK-INS TO OAKVILLE APARTMENTS DAVID LEA dlea@metroland.com NEWS tant Pavan Parmar com- ing out on top with 570 votes, followed by local en- trepreneur Shahrez Dani- yal Hayder with 502 votes, health care executive Nav Nanda with 491 votes, soft- ware consultant Amir Henry with 371 votes and financial professionalfinancial professionalf Shahab Khan with 108 votes. The Ward 7 town coun- cillor race was closer still with lawyer Jasvinder Sandhu elected with 551 votes, Realtor Saima Zaidi getting 532 votes, Adrian Paris receiving 455 votes and Ajay Rosha receiving 420 votes. Following these re- sults, Hayder's family hired a lawyer and filed an application with the Onta- rio Superior Court of Jus- tice, which among other things calls on the court to issue an order determin- ing that the Ward 7 elec- tions were not valid and that a byelection should be held. The application says the grounds for these re- quests include alleged er- rors made in which Ward 6 voting cards were sent to Ward 7 voters. Allegations are also made in the application that people voted in the Ward 7 election who did not actually live in the ward. None of the allegations have been proven in court. A hearing was held in Milton court on Feb. 26, which resulted in the court issuing an order for the Town to provide Hayd- er's lawyer with various records related to the Ward 7 election. The court also called on the town clerk to retain the election ballots for Wards 6 and 7. Several new hearing dates were also scheduled. An Aug. 19 hearing has been scheduled to hear Halton Region's motion to intervene in the court ap- plication. The Halton Region is requesting that the appli- cation against the Ward 7 town and regional council- lor be dismissed because the region was not named as a party or served within the statutory period. An Oct. 29 hearing will hear the applicant's mo- tion for disclosure of addi- tional documents. A two-day hearing for the main court application has yet to be scheduled, however, it may take place at some point in February 2020. COUNCIL Continued from page 3 SEVERAL HEARINGS HAVE BEEN SCHEDULED

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