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Home NewsOntario Man Kenneth Law Pleads Guilty to 14 Counts of Aiding Suicide in Major Poison Case

Ontario Man Kenneth Law Pleads Guilty to 14 Counts of Aiding Suicide in Major Poison Case

by Olawunmi Sola-Otegbade
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Kenneth Law has pleaded guilty to 14 counts of aiding and abetting suicide in a high-profile Canadian case involving the sale of toxic substances linked to multiple deaths across Ontario and other countries.

Law entered his guilty plea Friday morning in a courthouse in Newmarket, while prosecutors confirmed that previously filed murder charges against him would be withdrawn.

The Ontario man was arrested in 2023 after investigators accused him of supplying victims with sodium nitrite, a chemical commonly used in meat preservation but potentially fatal when consumed in high concentrations. Authorities alleged that Law sold the substance and other harmful materials through several online platforms targeting vulnerable individuals.

According to police, Law shipped more than 1,200 packages to customers across 41 countries, raising global concern over online access to dangerous chemicals linked to self-harm.

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Investigators connected the case to 14 deaths in Ontario, including the death of a 16-year-old victim, the youngest among those identified.

Crown attorney Peter Westgate told the court that the murder charges could no longer proceed due to a prior legal ruling that made a murder prosecution impossible under Ontario law.

“This is the binding authority in Ontario. The decision makes a murder prosecution in this case impossible,” Westgate said during the hearing.

As Law formally entered guilty pleas for each charge, emotional family members of victims sat quietly inside the courtroom, with some visibly crying while others shook their heads in disbelief.

The court also heard that prosecutors would spend several hours reading an agreed statement of facts detailing the evidence and circumstances surrounding the case.

The case has drawn international attention because of the scale of the online operation and growing concerns over internet-based sales of harmful substances connected to suicide-related deaths.

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