Self-proclaimed 'Queen of Canada' representing herself in Saskatchewan court case
Romana Didulo and 15 followers face charges including intimidation and breaching court orders after RCMP seized 13 imitation firearms during a raid on their Saskatchewan compound.
- On September 3, Royal Canadian Mounted Police arrested Romana Didulo, self-proclaimed `Queen of Canada`, and 14 others at a decommissioned Richmound school; Didulo and Ricky Manz were rearrested on September 4 after release breaches.
- RCMP said the raid followed reports that the compound occupant alleged to have firearms and tied to a July incident threatening four people including a police officer.
- Police seized 13 imitation semi‑automatic handguns, ammunition and electronic devices during the September 3 search, and the Saskatchewan Health Authority ordered the former school building vacated on September 4 with fines up to $75,000.
- A judge remanded Didulo after her first appearance on Friday and later granted bail with conditions barring contact with Ricky Manz, requiring residence monitoring in Regina, and prohibiting weapons; she will represent herself at a Monday hearing with a return to court on Wednesday.
- Didulo emerged around 2020 as a prominent QAnon figure and moved her group into the Richmound property in late 2023, naming it the `Kingdom of Canada`; locals have long complained about threats and harassment.
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9 Articles
Self-Declared ‘Queen of Canada’ Granted Bail, Must Remain in Regina
Self-proclaimed “Queen of Canada” and compound leader Romana Didulo has been granted bail for a second time after being arrested twice last week, first during an RCMP raid and again a day later for allegedly breaching the conditions of her release. Didulo was released on Sept. 8 with strict conditions and an order to remain in Regina until her upcoming trial. RCMP say the charges being addressed at trial stem from an incident in July when four i…


Self-proclaimed ‘Queen of Canada’ representing herself in Saskatchewan court case
Romana Didulo and some of her "Kingdom of Canada" followers, who have promoted various conspiracy theories, set up a compound west of Regina in 2023.
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