The self -proclaimed “Queen of Canada”, Romana Didulo, will return to the Court for a bail audience on Swift Current on Monday after spending the weekend in custody.
The 50 -year -old worship leader was sent after his first appearance in the Provincial Court on Friday for charges not to comply with a company and intimidate a justice system participant.
He had been living with members of the cult at a dismantled school in Richmound, Sask., About 365 kilometers west Regina, when RCMP was attacked on Wednesday.
Ricky Manz, owner of the former school in Richmound, was arrested last week for the same positions and kept in custody until his bail audience, also scheduled for Monday.
The condition of the task that both have supposedly violated is that they were not supposed to be contacted.
The position of intimidation comes from an investigation by Julio in Richmound, according to RCMP. The information discussed during the court on Friday indicated that the position is allegedly related to the intimidation of four people, including a police officer.
Didulo and Manz were two of 16 people who were arrested by RCMP after Wednesday’s raid. All were released without charges, then Didulo and Manz were Rentary and accused.
Since the cult base was established in Richmound, a town of about 120 people, there have been complaints from the locals, who accuse the group of harassed people and conspire to take care of the city.
RCMP said that the cult complex raided last week after receiving a report that one of its occupants had a firearm. Police said they seized 13 semi -automatic imitation guns, ammunition and a large number of electronic devices.
Order to vacate construction
Saskatchewan’s health authority has now considered that the old school is not suitable for the room. The health authority published an order to evict Friday, after discovering that the building was not connected to a municipal wastewater system.
A publication on social networks on Friday included photos of what seemed to be the order of the health authority published in fencing around the building.
In an email to CBC on Friday, Saskatchewan’s health authority confirmed the order, saying that “he had gathered sufficient evidence about health concerns and compliance problems … to determine that there is a risk for public health safety” and that the building was considered “not suitable for human occupation.”
As a result, the health authority issued an eviction order for anyone who still occupies the building, according to email.
RCMP said that at least three other people are expected to be charged in the investigation.
Front burnerCult leader of ‘Queen of Canada’ arrested
On Wednesday, 16 people, including Romana Didulo, the cult leader known as the “Queen of Canada”, were arrested in the small village of Richmound of Saskatchewan. RCMP released them the next day, but then reevalized two unidentified individuals. Didulo and his followers have been hidden in a dismantling school there for two years. Its presence has been a source of anger for many locals, and increased divisions among the townspeople. Today: What happens when a cult arrives in the city, especially in a moment of social polarization so intense? Our guest is Rachel Browne, a research journalist and documentary filmmaker who is currently working on a podcast for CBC on the impact that the “Queen of Canada” has had on this small village. For front burner transcripts, visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts [https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts]