2 men found guilty of first-degree murder of Toronto man parked in his car

Two men on trial for the fatal shooting of a stranger sitting in his parked car outside his Scarbrough home four years ago have been found guilty of first-degree murder.
Leighton Hopkinson and Jordan Mendez were charged with the June 2021 first-degree murder of Keron Brathwaite and the attempted murder of Brathwaite’s friends, Derka Ali-Best and Leonardo Miller, who were also passengers in Brathwaite’s Mercedes.
Brathwaite suffered 19 gunshot wounds and five graze gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead at the scene. Ali-Best, who was in the front passenger seat, suffered a gunshot wound to the shoulder but survived. Miller was not struck.
The jury took just over a day to reach their verdict. First-degree murder is an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.
The decision came down Tuesday night following a five-week trial.
As Mendez was being led out of the courtroom in handcuffs, Mendez said to Hopkinson with a smirk on his face, “I’ve been in this situation before.”
Assistant Crown prosecutors argued at trial that that the killing of Brathwaite was planned and deliberate.
The Crown told the jury in its closing address that while we don’t know why the killing happened, motive is not something the Crown must prove. “Was it a case of mistaken identity? Was it a message sent to the neighbourhood? I wish I had an answer to that question,” Hickey said.
Hickey said the evidence reveals that Mendez and Hopkinson drove into the area of Scarborough Golf Club Road and Lawrence Avenue in the early morning hours of June 11, 2021, and killed Brathwaite in a hail of bullets.

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Both men were shooting at the time and admitted to being the occupants of the Jeep on the witness stand.
The shooters were inside a rented silver Jeep Cherokee with stolen plates. Both Hopkinson and Mendez admitted on the stand to being in the vehicle at the time of the shooting. Both were armed.
Hopkinson testified in his defence that, in a fit of rage, he opened fire after seeing a Mercedes-Benz that he believed belonged to someone else.
Just hours before the shooting, he claimed, the mother of his child told him that her ex-boyfriend, who also drove a Mercedes, had assaulted her.
Hopkinson told the jury he was furious and, upon seeing what he thought was that man’s car, began shooting.
Hopkinson claimed he believed the vehicle was unoccupied. He admitted to firing two separate handguns.
“It was unplanned and unexpected,” said Hopkinson’s lawyer, Craig Zeeh, in closing arguments.
Mendez, meanwhile, testified that he was merely a passenger in the Jeep and denied taking part in the shooting. He admitted he was carrying a Glock 17 at the time but claimed he never fired it.
Mendez’s lawyer, Saman Wickramasinghe, argued there was an “evidentiary deficit” in the case, pointing to a lack of forensic or eyewitness evidence tying Mendez to the actual shooting.
“There is no proof that Mr. Mendez fired a gun, or that he assisted Mr. Hopkinson,” he said.
The jury was not told about Mendez’s previous conviction in a separate homicide.
In 2013, he was found guilty of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Joel Waldon. That conviction was later overturned by the Court of Appeal, and at his 2019 retrial, Mendez admitted to firing the fatal shots but claimed self-defence.
He was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 15 years, with 12 years and 7.5 months credited for pretrial custody, leaving just over two years to serve.
The jury was also not made aware that both men are still facing charges in another homicide: the killing of 29-year-old Trurell Brown, who was shot multiple times and found dead in Ajax on June 2, 2021, just nine days before Brathwaite’s murder.
That trial ended in a mistrial last December, and the charges remain outstanding.
A new trial has been scheduled for Hopkinson and Mendez in March.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.


SEATTLE – Kevin Gausman will get the start for the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series.
He’s 1-1 in the playoffs this year with a 2.38 earned-run average.
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The Seattle Mariners will counter with Bryce Miller on Friday afternoon.
Blue Jays slugger Anthony Santander is not in the starting lineup for tonight’s Game 4 due to back stiffness.

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Manager John Schneider says Addison Barger will move to right field, Ernie Clement will play third base and Isiah Kiner-Falefa will start at second base.
The Blue Jays can even the best-of-seven series at two games apiece with a second straight victory at T-Mobile Park.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 16, 2025.
© 2025 The Canadian Press

A British Columbia First Nation is getting some land back in an agreement with the federal government as part of a claim settlement that dates back almost two centuries.
Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Rebecca Alty and Snuneymuxw First Nation Chief Mike Wyse say in a joint announcement that the three parcels of land in Nanaimo, B.C., total about 80 hectares and were Defence Department lands.

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The announcement comes months after an agreement between the two parties to settle a claim over the federal government failing to set aside village land previously promised in an 1854 treaty.
The federal government has also agreed to provide $42 million in compensation to the First Nation in the agreement.
The nation says its vision for the land involves a mixed-use development that include housing, commercial space, community infrastructure and economic opportunities.
The federal government says the Snuneymuxw has the lowest reserve land base per capita among B.C. First Nations, and the addition will increase its role in the Nanaimo region.
© 2025 The Canadian Press

The parents of an infant who was killed, along with his grandparents, in a wrong-way crash on Highway 401 in Whitby, Ont., in April 2024 are suing Durham police.
The statement of claim from Gokulnath Manivannan and Ashwitha Jawahar, and two other family members, was filed this month against two Durham Regional Police officers, the Durham Regional Police Services Board, the estate of the driver who struck them and U-Haul.
Lawyers Brad Moscato and Adam Wagman of Howie, Sacks & Henry LLP sent a statement to Global News calling the loss to their clients “unimaginable” and indicating that their focus right now is on “grieving and supporting one another through this devastating time.”
Wagman told Global News in an interview they want to ensure there is a “system that prevents the public being put at risk.”
“Obviously, the police are there to fight crime once it happens. But primarily, the police are here to protect the public. In this particular instance, the system failed,” he said.
“I don’t even suggest that it’s the individual police officers. The system failed this family, the system failed every single person who was on the 401 that day and this could have happened to any of them.”
On the night of April 29, 2024, the SIU said Durham Regional Police officers were notified by an off-duty officer of a robbery at an LCBO near Green Road and Highway 2 in Clarington, Ont.

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The SIU said officers found a vehicle of interest — a U-Haul cargo van — and followed the van through numerous streets in Durham Region “as the vehicle drove erratically” and then got on Highway 401 at Stevenson Road in Oshawa in the wrong direction and was travelling westbound in the eastbound lanes.

Shortly after, there was a multi-vehicle collision on Highway 401, just east of Highway 412, in Whitby, resulting in the death of the child, aged three months, his grandmother, 55, and his grandfather, 60.
The baby’s parents, both from Ajax, were also in the car and were injured in the collision.
The driver of the U-Haul, Gagandeep Singh, 21, was killed in the crash.
The statement of claim alleges Sgt. Richard Flynn and Const. Brandon Hamilton “exercised negligent and reckless judgment” when they “drove on to Highway 401, in the wrong direction, and pursued the Suspect Motor Vehicle westbound in the eastbound lanes.”
It adds the two officers “failed to consider available alternatives to pursuing the Suspect Motor Vehicle” and “failed to consider public safety in their pursuit of the Suspect Motor Vehicle.”
Statements of defence have not yet been filed. Durham Regional Police told Global News while its aware of the lawsuit, it will not comment as it is part of an ongoing investigation and legal process.

Flynn and Hamilton were both charged with three counts each of criminal negligence causing death and two counts each of criminal negligence causing bodily harm.
The plaintiffs, which include the baby’s remaining grandmother in India and his aunt, are claiming damages in the amount of $25 million for personal injuries and corresponding damages.
“We know that a lawsuit and money can’t bring back what these people have lost. We hope that there is a measure of comfort that compensation can bring and that they can use that money to honor their loved ones, but we’re a long way away from that,” Wagman said.
“Really, we want to start by getting answers and we want to make sure our community is safe, and that’s what the police want to do, too. So we want to make sure that we have a system going forward to prevent this from happening to anybody else in the future.”
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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