In 1974, Peggi and family moved to an acreage in Christopher Lake which became their cherished country home for the next 20 years. Included on her list of athletic interests were cross country skiing, curling and golfing, especially Ladies’ night at Silver Hills and Saturday mixed golf at Suncrest resort in Palm Desert, California where she also enjoyed aqua-fit sessions in the pool. By the spring of 1972, seven months pregnant with her youngest child, she mounted a serious challenge for the ladies’ indoor championship, and only an equipment failure in the near final round prevented her from taking top prize. Peggi quickly rose to the upper tier of Saskatchewan female archers. In the early 70s Peggi developed a love for archery, honing her skills at Prince Albert’s Fish and Game Club, and later the family range in the basement of their home in Christopher Lake. Over the years, Peggi worked as an X-Ray Technician at various clinics, several times putting her career on pause to raise her family. In 1969, they moved to Prince Albert where Bernie started working at the new pulp mill. Soon after, while living in Saskatoon, they started their family. They were married in Prince Albert on March 27, 1967. It was during her training that she met her husband, Bernie Dupuis. Following this, she moved to Regina to take her first job. Upon graduation, Peggi pursued a career as an X-Ray Technician at the Holy Family Hospital in Prince Albert and the University of Saskatchewan. Prior to beginning grade 11, the family moved to Grenfell where her father took a job managing the Beaver Lumber and Peggi completed high school. Joseph’s Separate School followed by high school at Prince Albert Collegiate Institute (P.A.C.I.). The Kruger family later moved to Prince Albert where Peggi attended primary school at St. ![]() She was born August 2, 1946, in Prince Albert, living her first few years on the family farm in Strong Pine. All rights reserved.It is with deep sadness that the family of Margaret “Peggi” Ann Dupuis (née Kruger) announce her passing in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, on June 10, 2023. ™ & © 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. In November, one of Trump’s employees allegedly gave Trump a photograph of boxes stacked in the storage room so that he could see how many boxes were stacked. In December, Walt Nauta, a Trump aide charged alongside the former president, allegedly found several of the boxes had fallen and spilled their contents onto the floor. The storage room was also near the liquor supply closet, linen room, lock shop and various other rooms. ![]() The hallway to that storage room, according to prosecutors, could be accessible from “multiple outside entrances” including the pool patio. The boxes were moved to a storage room on the ground floor of Mar-a-Lago. Prosecutors describe the ballroom as a space where “events and gatherings took place.” An individual in the photo has been redacted.Ī number of the boxes spent time in a bathroom and shower in The Mar-a-Lago Club’s Lake Room. Initially, some of the boxes were stacked on the stage of Mar-a-Lago’s White and Gold Ballroom, according to the indictment. ![]() Here’s where documents were stored or found: Some classified documents contained information on US defense and nuclear capabilities that required special handling, according to the indictment. While the Secret Service protected Trump and family members after he left office, the agency wasn’t responsible for the boxes or contents, nor did Trump say classified documents were at Mar-a-Lago, the indictment states. (CNN) - Former President Donald Trump allegedly kept classified documents at various places in his Mar-a-Lago resort, including a public ballroom, bathroom and a bedroom.Īccording to the special counsel’s indictment of Trump released Friday, the Florida resort hosted more than 150 social events including weddings, movie premiers and fundraisers between January 2021 and August 2022, when the FBI executed a court-approved search of the premises for the documents.
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