A Michigan mom is speaking out after her teenage son died after consuming a product ordered online from a company tied to a Mississauga man facing charges of aiding and abetting suicide, as Canadian politicians propose new rules to make tech giants more accountable for what they promote and sell.
A Colorado family is calling for justice after the death of their 20-year-old daughter appears to be linked to a Mississauga man who has been charged with aiding and abetting suicide through the sale and distribution of sodium nitrite.
As new details surface in the investigation into Kenneth Law, representatives for the family of a 17-year-old boy who died last year after ingesting a chemical allegedly sold by the Ontario man are speaking out after his death, calling on online retailers to pull the compound from digital shelves.
Canadian authorities sent a list of British buyers from Kenneth Law s websites to The National Crime Agency. Officers are said to have been sent to check on those listed and seize unused packets.
Kenneth Law, 57, from Mississauga, Ontario, was charged for alleged online sales and distribution of the substance said to be related to two deaths in the Peel region of Toronto.