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I have ‘no political power’ over Donald Trump or Mark Carney: Wayne Gretzky

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From: Blois, Kody - M.P.<Kody.Blois@parl.gc.ca>
Date: Mon, May 12, 2025 at 3:05 PM
Subject: Automatic reply: Sophia Harris Should review page 14 and tell truth about what I have been sending her since 2002
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>


Thank you for emailing my office, I appreciate you reaching out to me.

 

Due to the high volume of emails that our office receives daily, there may be a delay in our response.  Please note that we give priority to correspondence received from the constituents of Kings-Hants, and as such, we ask that you include your residential address and telephone number in your communication, to better assist you.

 

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Find yours at: https//enstools.electionsnovascotia.ca/edinfo2012/

 

 

Kody Blois

Member of Parliament

Kings–Hants



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From: Minister of Finance / Ministre des Finances<minister-ministre@fin.gc.ca>
Date: Mon, May 12, 2025 at 3:05 PM
Subject: Automatic reply: Sophia Harris Should review page 14 and tell truth about what I have been sending her since 2002
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>


The Department of Finance acknowledges receipt of your electronic correspondence. Please be assured that we appreciate receiving your comments.Le ministère des Finances Canada accuse réception de votre courriel. Nous vous assurons que vos commentaires sont les bienvenus.


---------- Original message ---------
From: Fife, Robert<RFife@globeandmail.com>
Date: Mon, May 12, 2025 at 3:06 PM
Subject: Automatic reply: Sophia Harris Should review page 14 and tell truth about what I have been sending her since 2002
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>


I am away from the office. If you have any story ideas or editorial questions, please contact Norren Rasbach at Nrasbach@globeandmail.com or Bill Curry at Bcurry@globeandmail.com

 

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From: David Amos<david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, May 12, 2025 at 3:02 PM
Subject: Sophia Harris Should review page 14 and tell truth about what I have been sending her since 2002
To: Sophia.Harris <sophia.harris@cbc.ca>, djtjr <djtjr@trumporg.com>, <atravers@sfu.ca>, <nathan.kalman.lamb@unb.ca>, <Kody.Blois@parl.gc.ca>, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, prontoman1 <prontoman1@protonmail.com>, <ps.ministerofpublicsafety-ministredelasecuritepublique.sp@ps-sp.gc.ca>, dominic.leblanc <dominic.leblanc@parl.gc.ca>, David.Akin <David.Akin@globalnews.ca>, fin.minfinance-financemin.fin <fin.minfinance-financemin.fin@canada.ca>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, <RobMooreFundyRoyal@gmail.com>, <obby.khan@leg.gov.mb.ca>, hon.melanie.joly <hon.melanie.joly@canada.ca>, John.Williamson <John.Williamson@parl.gc.ca>, ragingdissident <ragingdissident@protonmail.com>, <jasonlavigne@outlook.com>, rfife <rfife@globeandmail.com>, news957 <news957@rogers.com>, <Vincent.gircys@gmail.com>, don.davies <don.davies@parl.gc.ca>, Dana-lee Melfi <Dana_lee_ca@hotmail.com>, Christopher Scott <chris.scott@whistlestoptruckstop.ca>, Chrystia.Freeland <Chrystia.Freeland@parl.gc.ca>, <Todd.Veinotte@rci.rogers.com>, <vicki.hogarth@chco.tv>, premier <premier@leg.gov.mb.ca>, premier <premier@ontario.ca>, premier <premier@gov.ab.ca>, premier <premier@gov.bc.ca>
 
 
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/conference-us-travel-1.7531255
 

Several conferences relocate north of the border as Canadians refuse to travel to the U.S.

Conference organizers say they made changes after members expressed concerns over U.S. travel



After U.S. President Donald Trump took office, sociologist Travers — who goes by one name — nixed plans to attend the North American Society for the Sociology of Sport (NASSS) conference in Seattle this November. 

Travers, an associate professor at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., is the president-elect of NASSS. But as a trans person, they are wary of visiting the U.S. at a time when the Trump administration is rolling back transgender rights.

"[I] will not be travelling to the United States right now because it feels very dangerous to do so," said Travers.

The sociologist soon realized the problem was widespread: around 40 per cent of NASSS's 600 members live in Canada, and many of them reported that they, too, don't want to attend the Seattle conference, due to reports of increased scrutiny at the U.S. border, Trump's trade war and his threats to annex Canada.

"If we were to just hold the conference in Seattle, it would be significantly under-attended," Travers said of the annual conference where NASSS members meet and share research about the sociological study of sport. 

Because breaking the venue contract would be cost-prohibitive, organizers came up with a creative solution: a pared-down Seattle conference with an added tandem one in Vancouver. Some events will take place in both locations, courtesy video conferencing.

Travers standing in front of a bookshelf Travers, an associate professor at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., helped relocate part of a Seattle-based conference to Vancouver to accommodate Canadian participants who didn't want to travel to the U.S. (Mike Zimmerman/CBC)

"I have certainly heard back from many NASSS members who said, 'Thank you, thank you. I was afraid to go to the United States,'" said Travers.

NASSS isn't alone in changing its conference plans since Trump took office. CBC News has identified three North American-based organizations that recently relocated upcoming conferences — either partially or fully — from the U.S. to Canada. In a fourth case, organizers chose Canada, knowing many of its Canadian participants won't go to the U.S.

Travel to the U.S. from several countries has dropped recently, with Canada leading the pack: in March, the number of return trips among Canadians travelling to the U.S. plummeted by 13.5 per cent for air travel, and by a whopping 32 per cent for land travel.

Professor interrogated at U.S. customs

While the low Canadian dollar has deterred some travellers, the political climate in the U.S. and Trump's hardline crackdown on immigration has fuelled much of the decline. 

"After Trump was voted in office, I know that my members have very little interest in attending a conference in the U.S.," saidDr. Jason Karamchandani, president of the Canadian Association of Pathologists (CAP).

So organizers for a 2026 joint conference between CAP and the American Society for Clinical Pathology chose a Montreal venue — even though the American group has six times more members.

"There have been stories of people facing challenges entering the United States," said Karamchandani.

Those stories include the 11-day detainment of Canadian Jasmine Mooney in March. A French scientist was denied entry that same month, because U.S. customs officers found anti-Trump messages on his phone, according to the French government. 

Sociologist and NASSS member Nathan Kalman-Lamb also had an incident at U.S. customs in March, at Montreal's Trudeau International Airport, as he was heading to a conference at the University of South Carolina. 

Kalman-Lamb, a Canadian citizen, says despite having all the right documentation, including an invite from the university, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer interrogated him and searched his possessions, including his phone and wallet. 

 Nathan Kalman-Lamb standing in front of a bookshelf.University of New Brunswick sociology professor Nathan Kalman-Lamb says he's thrilled the North American Society for the Sociology of Sport has added a second conference in Vancouver along with the Seattle venue because he's sworn off travel to the U.S. right now. (Mikael Mayer/CBC)

"To be subject to these kind of searches and the seemingly arbitrary authority of basically police officers in these spaces, it's beyond disquieting. It's frightening," said Kalman-Lamb, an assistant professor at the University of New Brunswick.

He says three hours later, the officer allowed him to continue on his journey. However, by this time, he had missed his flight and had to rebook it. He says no one explained why he had been targeted, so he's sworn off U.S. travel for now.

"I don't even think for research I can justify at this point taking the risk of travelling to the United States," he said.

Kalman-Lamb says he was thrilled when he learned he won't miss the upcoming NASSS conference, which he will now attend in Vancouver. 

U.S. CBP spokesperson Jessica Turner told CBC News in an email that all travellers are subject to inspection upon entry. 

She also said Trump's border crackdown is designed to protect the country and that "lawful travellers have nothing to fear from these measures."

Conferences pull the plug on U.S. venues

Despite CBP's reassurances, some conferences that already booked a U.S. location have decided to scrap the venues entirely. 

Work and Family Researchers Network (WFRN), an association for work-family scholars, announced in April it has relocated its 2026 biennialconference from Boston to Montreal. The conference typically attracts 400 to 500 participants from across the globe. 

WATCH | Canadian travel to U.S. plummets: 
 
Canadian visits to U.S. plummet over fear of harsh new security measures
 
Canadians are making fewer trips to the U.S. over fears about the Trump administration’s harsh new security measures, including the heightened possibility of being detained. Statistics Canada says air travel is down 13 per cent, and land travel is down by almost a third.

The association told CBC News it decided to change locations after hearing from members, including Canadians, who expressed concerns about travelling to the U.S. 

"This was very troubling for our international organization, with approximately 40 per cent of our members residing outside of the United States," said WFRN president Jennifer Hook in a statement.

The International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans is relocating its 2025 Canadian Employee Benefits Conference from San Diego to Canada. The exact dates and location have yet to be announced. 

The foundation, an educational organization for the employee benefits industry, declined to comment. But a statement posted online last month suggests the conference, which hosts up to 1,500 Canadians, was moved due to travel concerns.

"We believe this move will enable us to educate more attendees," said the statement. 

Non-profit conference manager Heather Dow, who has organized more than 100 conferences and events since 2012, says if conference organizers continue to choose Canada over U.S. venues, it could be a boon for the Canadian economy. 

"If you think of a conference that might have 300 participants, that could be a boost into the economy of five or $600,000 or more," said Dow, senior manager with Events & Management Plus in Kingston, Ont. "I think this is a great opportunity for Canada."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Sophia Harris

Business Reporter

Based in Toronto, Sophia Harris covers consumer and business for CBC News web, radio and TV. She previously worked as a CBC videojournalist in the Maritimes, where she won an Atlantic Journalism Award for her work. Got a story idea? Contact: sophia.harris@cbc.ca

 
  
 
 

Travers (they/them/their)

Professor of Sociology
Sociology & Anthropology

Biography

Dr. Travers is a Professor of Sociology at Simon Fraser University. Their recent book, The Trans Generation: How Trans Kids (and Their Parents) Are Creating a Gender Revolution, situates trans kids in Canada and the US, white settler nations characterized by significant social inequality. In addition to a central research focus on transgender children and youth, Dr. Travers has published extensively on the relationship between sport and social justice, with particular emphasis on the inclusion and exclusion of women, queer and trans people of all ages. A current research program in this field focuses on gender equity in youth baseball. Travers is also the leader of an interdisciplinary research team examining electric micro-mobilities (electric scooters/skateboards/unicycles/bikes) from a mobility justice perspective.  

Education

PhD (Sociology), University of Oregon
MA (Sociology), University of British Columbia
BA Hons. (Political Science), Simon Fraser University

Areas of Interest

Social theory (classical, feminist, queer and trans/gender); sociology of sport; children and gender justice; social issues and movements; gender and technology.

 


 

Nathan Kalman-Lamb

Assistant Professor

Sociology

Fredericton

nathan.kalman.lamb@unb.ca
1 506 452 6217



Nathan Kalman-Lamb joined the Department of Sociology at UNB as an Assistant Professor in 2022. Previously, he worked as a Lecturing Fellow in the Thompson Writing Program at Duke University for six years after receiving his doctorate in Social and Political Thought from York University in 2016.

In addition to the research cited below, Nathan is the co-host of The End of Sport podcast and a frequent contributor to The Guardian, The Chronicle of Higher Education, TIME, Los Angeles Times, Jacobin, and other public venues.

Research interests

Nathan's scholarly work sits at the intersection of social theory and the sociology of sport, with a particular focus on labor, racism, and exploitation. His most recent book Game Misconduct: Injury, Fandom, and the Business of Sport, based on qualitative interviews with former professional hockey players and fans of the sport, uses Marxist-Feminist social reproduction theory to explore how the political economy of sports like hockey is predicated on an affective transfer from athletic workers to fans through the physical sacrifice that is fundamental to these 'games.'

His current research focuses on the world of US college football. Alongside collaborator Derek Silva, he is exploring through qualitative interviews with former US college football players how their experiences in the sport were saturated with harm, coercion, and exploitation. This project, the foundation of a book contracted with UNC Press entitled The End of College Football: Exploitation in the Ivory Tower and on the Gridiron, examines the ways in which physical harm, coaching abuse, economic extraction, racialized plantation dynamics, and a desiccated academic experience make US college football one of the most exploitative sites in US society today. This project finds its theoretical inspiration in an intersection between racial capitalism theory and Marxist-Feminist social reproduction theory.

Books

Kalman-Lamb, Nathan. (2018). Game Misconduct: Injury, Fandom, and the Business of Sport. Winnipeg: Fernwood Publishing.

Abdel-Shehid, Gamal & Kalman-Lamb, Nathan. (2011.) Out of Left Field: Critical Perspectives on Social Inequality and Sport. Winnipeg: Fernwood Publishing.

 

 https://www.golfmagic.com/tour/us-pga/tiger-woods-notable-appearance-prompts-unanimous-reaction-why-was-he-there

New Tiger Woods photograph prompts unanimous reaction: "Why was he there?!"

Tiger Woods made an impromptu visit to the White House before the 2025 U.S. PGA Championship but has not revealed why he was there.

Tiger Woods

Tiger Woods

Tiger Woods will not be teeing it up at the US PGA Championship but the golfer did make a notable appearance before the second men's major of the year. 

Woods, 49, made a surprise visit to the White House in Washington last Friday evening. 

Senator Jim Banks of Indiana shared a photograph alongside the 15-time major champion. 

Woods, who was wearing a sharp navy blue suit, beamed ear-to-ear as he stood alongside the Republican. 

It is Woods' second trip to the White House in 2025 following his February meeting with Donald Trump, PGA Tour officials and figures from the rival LIV Golf League

Woods has not revealed why he took the trip last week and did not share any information about it on his social media channels.

Credit: Senator Jim Banks/X

Credit: Senator Jim Banks/X

Woods' personal life hit the headlines once again in 2025. 

Following weeks of intense speculation, Woods confirmed on 22 March that he was dating Vanessa Trump

He split with former girlfriend Erica Herman acrimoniously in October 2022.  

Woods released a bizarre statement confirming his new love interest.

"Love is in the air and life is better with you by my side," he wrote.  

"We look forward to our journey through life together. At this time, we would appreciate privacy to all those close to our hearts."

Credit: X/Tiger Woods

Credit: X/Tiger Woods

Vanessa is the ex-wife of president Trump's son, Donald Trump Jr. 

She is also the mother of the president's granddaughter, Kai Trump, who is a burgeoning golf social media star.

Kai was spotted attending TGL events earlier in the year and sat in the bleachers alongside Woods' teenage son Charlie

They both attend the same school in Florida. 

Charlie was in action last week as he attempted to qualify for the 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont. 

Unfortunately, Charlie came up short.

 

 In May 2019, Woods was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Trump, the fourth golfer to receive the honor

 

 https://www.ctvnews.ca/sports/article/wayne-gretzky-says-he-has-no-political-power-over-the-president-or-prime-minister/

I have ‘no political power’ over Donald Trump or Mark Carney: Wayne Gretzky

Published: 

FBI director is Kash Patel, left, tallking with former NHL player Wayne Gretzky, right, during the first period of an NHL hockey game between the Washington Capitals and Chicago Blackhawks, Friday, April 4, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

TORONTO — Retired NHL great Wayne Gretzky downplayed his influence on Donald Trump in his first public comments since the U.S. president began his second term and began making references to making Canada the 51st state.

On a radio show Monday hosted by Ben Mulroney, son of former Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, Gretzky never used Trump’s name and was never asked about Trump’s tariffs and trade war or the 51st state comments. Mulroney instead asked Gretzky if it registered with him that others attempt to use his name to further their agendas.

“I don’t worry about those kind of things because you can’t make everybody happy,” Gretzky said on the show on AM-640 in Toronto. “But, trust me, I have no political power with the prime minister or the president. That’s between those two guys, and that’s why you hold elections and that’s why people get to do what they want to do and say what they want to say. But trust me I have no pull or power with either the prime minister or the president.”

Some Canadians have openly wondered why Gretzky doesn’t speak out against Trump’s comments and they have noted his relationship with the Republican president dates back some years.

Asked about having his NHL career goals record broken by Alex Ovechkin, a Russian player, Gretzky also brushed that aside and said he and his teammates never talked about politics during his playing days.

“We watched basketball, we watched baseball, we talked about the Blue Jays, we talked about the New York Yankees,” Gretzky said. “Hockey players, that’s never on the docket. It’s just something that we stay in our lane. The prime minister and the president don’t tell us how to play hockey, and we don’t tell them how to do politics, right?”

Trump has called Gretzky a friend and once suggested the “Great One” should be Canada’s governor if the country becomes the 51st U.S. state. Gretzky sat with Trump’s FBI Director, Kash Patel, during the Washington Capitals games in which Ovechkin tied and broke his record.

The 64-year-old from Brantford, Ontario, has generally declined to discuss politics.

“I always say to my kids — I’ve got five American kids, seven American grandchildren, an American wife, a 103-year-old American mother-in-law, and I always tell them every day that you be as proud of the United States of America as I am to be a Canadian," Gretzky said on Mulroney’s show. “That’s what your grandfather would have wanted.”

 

 

 

"Bailey -- full of light and life, magnetic -- was beloved with the Kings, and across hockey. He earned seven Stanley Cup rings, two as a player with the Boston Bruins, five more as a scout for the Edmonton Oilers. He was a mentor and roommate to Wayne Gretzky and the son of NHL Hall of Fame forward Irvine "Ace" Bailey. He played 10 seasons in the NHL (and one in the World Hockey Association) for the Bruins, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues, Washington Capitals and Oilers.
"He was a character," Gretzky told NHL Network Sirius XM for their podcast "9/11 and sports: 20 years later.""He really didn't have any enemies. Him and I became best friends. He was my roommate in the WHA. He was a stepdad to me, he was like a big brother, everything all in one. At times he'd be my hardest critic. He would put me in my place."

 

https://www.nhl.com/news/kings-honor-staffers-killed-on-september-11th-326109802

LAK_Sept11_Memorial_Main

Twenty years have gone by, and the sticker remains, a reminder tucked behind the left ear. The sticker, a crown with the name "Ace" arching over it and Mark underneath, has adorned the helmets of hundreds of Los Angeles Kings players, those who remember exactly where they were on Sept. 11, 2001, and those, like Quinton Byfield, who weren't yet born on that day.

It's that sticker, the quiet black-and-white reminder of lives now 20 years gone, that causes Mike Bavis' voice to get husky and thick. It's the idea that, even after all this time, no one in the Kings organization, no one in hockey, has forgotten Ace Bailey or Mark Bavis, two victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks that claimed the lives of 2,977 people.
"When they say, 'Never forget,' a lot of those people with the Kings weren't even there then," said Mike Bavis, Mark's twin brother.
And yet, the Kings have ensured that their memory is ever-present.
"It allows us to be able to tell the story," said Daryl Evans, the Kings radio commentator. "We all move on, but we never forget."

LAK_Sept11_HelmetDecal

Bailey, then the director of scouting for the Kings, and Bavis, an amateur scout with the team, each was aboard United Airlines Flight 175 from Boston to Los Angeles when hijackers took over the airplane and flew it into the south tower of the World Trade Center in New York.
Garnet "Ace" Bailey was 53. Mark Bavis was 31.
\\\\
Bailey -- full of light and life, magnetic -- was beloved with the Kings, and across hockey. He earned seven Stanley Cup rings, two as a player with the Boston Bruins, five more as a scout for the Edmonton Oilers. He was a mentor and roommate to Wayne Gretzky and the son of NHL Hall of Fame forward Irvine "Ace" Bailey. He played 10 seasons in the NHL (and one in the World Hockey Association) for the Bruins, Detroit Red Wings, St. Louis Blues, Washington Capitals and Oilers.
"He was a character," Gretzky told NHL Network Sirius XM for their podcast "9/11 and sports: 20 years later.""He really didn't have any enemies. Him and I became best friends. He was my roommate in the WHA. He was a stepdad to me, he was like a big brother, everything all in one. At times he'd be my hardest critic. He would put me in my place."
As Jeff Moeller, who was Kings public relations director in 2001 and now is senior director of business communications and heritage, simply put it, "Ace was the best."
He was warm. He was welcoming. He made friends everywhere.
"Some people just have it. It's a gift. It might be his smile, his words, saying the right thing at the right time," Evans said. "He just captivated your attention when he was around. He just put a lot of energy into any room that he stepped into."
Bavis was younger, finding his footing in his hockey career after four years at Boston University, where he played alongside Mike, and three years in the American Hockey League and ECHL. He had come to the Kings a year earlier and already had demonstrated his eye for talent, advocating for two college players, David Steckel and Michael Cammalleri, who the Kings would select in the first and second round, respectively, of the 2001 NHL Draft, Bavis' only draft with the team.

 
 
 
 
 

The LA Kings remember Ace Bailey and Mark Bavis

Mark and Mike were part of the Bobby Orr generation in Boston, growing up in a big family with six older siblings, though they were the only kids in the family to play hockey. It was a game they would ride all the way to the coaching and professional ranks.
"It was always having a linemate, a teammate, someone to compete against, to compete with," said Mike Bavis, who was recruiting as an assistant coach for Boston University in Calgary on 9/11. "We were lucky.
"He was well-liked, he was a great teammate. He was a great friend to so many different people. For me, it's hard to describe. It was both competitive in how we competed athletically, but it's a special bond that twins have, especially ones that are together as often as we were."
The legacies of Bailey and Bavis have stretched long beyond that day, though. The Ace Bailey Children's Foundation built "Ace's Place" at Tufts Children's Hospital in Boston and made lives better for children in the neonatal intensive care unit and pediatric emergency room before closing its doors in November 2020. The Mark Bavis Leadership Foundation has raised more than $400,000 and gives college scholarships and grants to Massachusetts high school students.
The two families have become close, united in their shared loss, their shared grief, pulled together every year when the date swings around, bound by what Mike Bavis calls a "powerful connection."
That connection hasn't wavered through the years, growing stronger as the days have melted away, as two decades have elapsed since the tragedy brought them together. It feels like a long time and no time at all for those who knew the two men.
"You wonder where 20 years has gone," said Evans, who makes a point to visit the 9/11 memorial when he's in New York with the Kings. "It still seems like it was yesterday. I think a lot of that is because of the way that we honor them each and every day. They're always a part of [us] here in Los Angeles. I think that speaks to how special they were.
"Every day, they're around us. There's constant reminders."
There are the decals, the Kings mascot, Bailey -- named to honor a man for whom children's charities were a priority -- and the two awards that the Kings give out annually: The Mark Bavis Memorial Award for Best Newcomer and the Ace Bailey Memorial Award for Most Inspirational.
They're still talked about, still remembered, still mourned.
"I wrote things out last night," said Pete Demers, who was the Kings head athletic trainer in 2001, about what he wanted to share about Bavis and Bailey. "But I didn't realize how hard it was going to be to keep the tears from coming. It's just like it happened last night.
"We lost two of our wonderful men in our Kings family, in Mark Bavis and Ace Bailey, and so many more, 2,975, in this senseless tragedy."

LAK_Bavis_Bailey_Cup_WTC

\\\\
Bailey and Bavis took the flight together on their way back to Los Angeles as the Kings opened training camp. Bruce Boudreau, then coach of the Kings' American Hockey League affiliate in Manchester, New Hampshire, had been slated to fly with them but changed his ticket from Sept. 11 to Sept. 10 after being convinced by Kings coach Andy Murray over the weekend to return early for a coaches' dinner.
However, the price difference for the ticket switch was too much in Bailey's eyes, so he remained on the original flight.
"I remember the last thing, when he dropped me off at the house. I said, 'I'll see you Tuesday morning,'" Boudreau told the NHL Network Sirius XM podcast.
In Los Angeles, the first day of training camp was dawning on that day, full of anticipation.
And then suddenly, it wasn't.
"For a day that's usually buzzing very early, it was very quiet," Moeller said. "All the televisions were on. You're trying to conduct business as usual, but word started sprinkling around that Ace and Mark could -- this could be a discussion point. We knew they were flying that day. We knew they were flying from Boston. We knew that typically at that time we used United Airlines for travel."
The puzzle pieces were beginning to fit together in an unimaginable way.
Dave Taylor, who was then Los Angeles' general manager, tried their cell phones -- three, four, five times -- in the futile hope that they might pick up and end the nightmare. He wanted so badly to reach them, to disprove what Katherine Bailey had told him was true, that she had dropped her husband off at the airport, that he was on that flight.
"You're kind of hoping, always hoping, that they were OK somewhere," said Taylor, who would be given the job of breaking the news to the team and staff. "But at the end of the day, we finally found out they were on the plane and they had gone into the World Trade Center. It was terrible."
For them, 20 years have not dimmed the day. It still feels near, visceral, present.
"It gets pretty raw," Taylor said. "It's been 20 years now. It's hard to believe that that much time has gone by."
\\\\
Early that morning, around 5:30 a.m., Demers had taken a stationary bike out at the team's training facility in El Segundo, California, setting it on the patio in the sunshine. He knew Bailey and Bavis were set to arrive in Los Angeles around noon and thought Bailey would want to be out, in his favorite place, in the sunshine.
"Ace, he's a special person," Demers said. "Always friendly, happy, with a great sense of humor and a real warm smile. A great guy. He always had time for everybody and everyone. On that first day of camp, I wanted to make my friend happy upon his arrival."
As the news trickled out, as the fears welled up and were confirmed, as the day dragged on and the hope dimmed and vanished, the bike sat out there in the California sun, waiting, a sign affixed with tape.
"Reserved for Ace Bailey," it said.

LAK_Sept11_BaileyMascot

The day, that terrible day, drew to a close. Everyone left. Demers knew he had to bring the bike back inside, untouched, unridden. He gathered his strength, asked his mother, who had died five years earlier, for her help, and he did what he had to do.
"I think it was the hardest day I ever had in my 41-year pro hockey career," Demers said. "And, by far, the hardest thing I've ever had to do in my life was to put Ace's bike back in the gym at the end of the day.
"It's something I'll never get over, I'll never forget, removing the sign 'Reserved for Ace Bailey' from the bike."

 

 

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Donald Trump Jr.<donjr@email.donjr.com>
Date: Fri, May 9, 2025 at 6:46 PM
Subject: DOT announces new ATC system
To: Friend <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>


MxM News

Friend, catch up on the stories the mainstream media won’t touch. Here are your top ten headlines from the MxM News team:


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Judge Jeanine Pirro named interim D.C. prosecutor

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