Angelina King

Reporter

Angelina King is a reporter with CBC Toronto's enterprise unit where she covers a wide range of topics. She has a particular interest in crime, justice issues and human interest stories. Angelina started her career in her home city of Saskatoon where she spent much of her time covering the courts. You can contact her at angelina.king@cbc.ca or @angelinaaking

Latest from Angelina King

Gridlocked: The Way Out

Congestion already costs Toronto drivers time and money. Here's how tolls could help

The final part of CBC Toronto’s three-part series Gridlocked: The Way Out explores why the idea of congestion pricing and tolls is so deeply unpopular in Ontario, despite helping ease traffic in other major cities, and how drivers may already be paying for congestion one way or another.
Gridlocked: The Way Out

Why experts say work on these 5 fronts is needed to tackle Toronto's congestion crisis

Part 2 of CBC Toronto's three-part series, Gridlocked: The Way Out, explains why congestion is so bad in Toronto and how experts say implementing a combination of several solutions in tandem could make things better.
Gridlocked: The Way Out

As gridlock grinds Toronto to a halt, here's what the city could learn from Seattle's traffic cameras

Part 1 of CBC Toronto's three-part series, Gridlocked: The Way Out, explores how automated enforcement for blocking the box and driving in bus lanes could help alleviate congestion in Toronto by looking to Seattle's existing programs.

The LCBO's hottest trend? Non-alcoholic drinks

The LCBO's 2024 sales report shows non-alcoholic beverage sales nearly doubled compared to the year before. Experts say wellness is a big reason why many are cutting back.

Workers owed $60M in unpaid wages Ontario failed to collect since 2017

Workers in Ontario are owed tens of millions of dollars in unpaid wages that the provincial government has yet to collect from employers, according to internal government records obtained by CBC Toronto.

No plan for immediate evacuation of Ontarians with disabilities in emergency a year after flagged as 'crisis'

The most recent review of the Ontario government's progress on implementing the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act considered the current state of emergency procedures for people with disabilities an immediate safety threat. But almost a year and a half after receiving the report, the province hasn't updated its emergency protocols. 

Former students sue Ontario company for $108K in tuition for unapproved web developer program

Ten former students are suing a Markham, Ont. company for a collective $108,000 in tuition they paid to what turned out to be a business providing unapproved vocational programs. Ontario's superintendent of career colleges ordered the company to stop advertising and offering the program in July.

Toronto lawyer ordered to pay more than $1M after clients said he kept money from real estate, business deals

A Toronto lawyer well-known in the Chinese community is accused of keeping clients' money after helping them close real estate and business transactions. He's been ordered to pay them more than $1 million, but hasn't.

7,200 Torontonians didn't get utility bills. Now, they have to pay up

The City of Toronto says it has to replace all its 470,000 water meter transmitters after 30 per cent of them broke and thousands of people didn't receive bills.
CBC Investigates

Toronto artist says he lost $2M in stolen paintings, forged mortgage to alleged fraudster killed last week

CBC Toronto reviewed hundreds of pages of court records and found two dozen lawsuits against Missaghi and others, as well as police reports, criminal fraud charges and two of Missaghi's lawyers losing their licences. Despite all this, Missaghi was never convicted, sanctioned or found liable of any of his alleged serial frauds before his death.