Sewage water continues to seep into a large puddle near the entrance of a purple-coloured school-turned-compound that housed members of a cult in the southwest Saskatchewan village of Richmound for the last two years.
Although the “Kingdom of Canada” cult was driven out earlier this month after a police raid, the village’s Mayor Brad Miller says the sewage water — overflow from the toilets and sinks inside the building — remains.
“If there’s wind, people probably 500 feet away can smell it,” says Miller, 64, in an interview.
“If you get it on your hands or whatever, you can smell it for hours. It stinks like you wouldn’t believe.”
And Miller thinks daily about how to keep them out if the Kingdom of Canada returns.
“I’m fed up. My family’s fed up. If you came out to the southwest, people are just fed up. It’s enough. It’s scary.
“When has a cult ever turned good?”
The sewage began pooling outside the building after the village cut the compound’s water and sewage system last year as a last resort to drive out the cult members.
The owner of the school, Ricky Manz, was not paying his water and utility bills, Miller says. Cult members then began dumping water overflowing from its toilet and sinks around the building.
But it wasn’t the sewage water that forced RCMP to raid the compound on Sept. 5. Mounties say they obtained a search warrant to enter the property on the belief someone inside had a firearm.
Mounties seized 13 imitation semi-automatic handguns along with ammunition and electronic devices in the raid. Manz, and Romana Didulo, the head of the Kingdom of Canada, and others were arrested.
Miller says he knows because he was there. He was asked by responding RCMP officers to help them wrestle Manz to the ground to arrest him, a takedown that left him rolling around in sewage.

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“I’m not kidding, I threw my pants away after the fight,” he said. “I never washed them or nothing.”
Miller, who has been living in the village of about 200 people for nearly 40 years, describes the late-night raid as one of the happiest moments of his life for a community that he says has been tormented for two years by the Kingdom of Canada, led by Didulo, the self-styled Queen of Canada.
“I was shaking with joy,” he says.
“They were sleeping when that raid happened.”
Manz, 61, a Richmound resident, faces multiple charges, including breaching a court order and attempting to intimidate a justice system participant, along with previous charges of assaulting two police officers.
Health officials have declared the building unfit for human habitation and are banning anyone from living there.
Didulo is facing charges of breaching a court order and attempting to intimidate a justice system participant.
The mayor says after Didulo’s arrival, he and his council tried to get the cult out of town because they appeared to be violating nuisance and commercial building bylaws but nothing worked.
“It was a commercial building and no one was allowed to sleep in there. We knew. The RCMP knew but we couldn’t get in without that warrant. We couldn’t prove it.”
Miller says cult members barricaded the compound, set up security cameras and erected bright LED lights, some of which faced the main highway that runs through the town. The members also harassed locals by yelling and recording them.
Children became too scared to go to the playground near the compound, Miller says.
The hatred and conspiracy theories the cult spread online shocked the community.
“But nobody cared about the small town in southwest Saskatchewan,” Miller says.
The Kingdom of Canada did not immediately respond to a request for comment and Manz’s lawyer declined an interview.
Christine Sarteschi, a criminology professor at Chatham University in Pennsylvania, has written a book about cults that includes details of Didulo’s Kingdom of Canada.
“There’s probably no cult as bizarre as hers,” the professor says.
Sarteschi says Didulo, who is in her 50s, moved to Vancouver from the Philippines at around the age of 15 to live with her grandparents after her parents died.
She says Didulo gained prominence during the 2022 “freedom convoy” occupation in Ottawa, where she tried to burn the Canadian flag.
Now she claims to be the “Queen of Canada” and characterizes herself as “the custodian of Earth and humanity,” who is an alien from another planet and can walk on water, Sarteschi says.
Sarteschi says Didulo encourages thousands of her followers via social media to stop paying their bills, taxes and debt under “natural law.”
Miller says the last two years of his five-year mayoralty have drained him and he worries for his safety sometimes.
“I’m just a normal hard worker, I worked in the gas (industry) for 35 years, and I thought I’d help my town out, become mayor,” he says.
He says he doesn’t know whether he will continue leading the village but says the worry is whether the Kingdom of Canada returns.
“What’s going to happen now? They’ll still start staying in that school and we won’t know again?” Miller asks.
“Then do we got to get a warrant again to get in there? That doesn’t even make sense.
“The whole system doesn’t make sense.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 24, 2025.
— With files from Jeremy Simes
© 2025 The Canadian Press
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