Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

1 Dead, As Many As 10 Hurt, In Hammer Attack At B.C. First Nation Office Near Lillooet

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Oct, 2015 03:12 PM
    One man is dead and as many as 10 people are hurt, some with life-threatening injuries, after a man walked into the Bridge River Indian Band office near Lillooet, B.C., armed with a hammer.
     
    Michaela Swan with the Interior Health Authority said that it is caring for two patients in critical condition, another two in serious condition and six others with non-life threatening injuries.
     
    The injured people have taken to hospitals around the region.
     
    RCMP said in a news release that they were called just before 8:30 a.m. Wednesday to a report that a man with a weapon was in the office.
     
    When police arrived they found the suspect already restrained.
     
    "RCMP members arrested the male but were unable to transport him as he became unconscious and unresponsive," the release said.
     
    The officers started CPR, but resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful and the man was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.
     
    Coroner Barb McLintock confirmed one man had died in the incident but couldn't provide further details. The B.C. Coroners Service was sending a team to investigate, she added.
     
    An emergency worker who didn't want to be named said the man apparently attacked one person with the hammer, and when others in the office went to help they were also beaten.
     
    Because the man died while in police custody, the Independent Investigations Office has stepped in to the case to investigate.
     
    The police watchdog said the RCMP will maintain jurisdiction over the investigation into the initial attack by the man.
     
    Bridge River Indian Band Chief Susan James issued a statement, saying her immediate concern was to ensure that the families involved in the tragedy were being helped.
     
    "Our attention now will be on the healing work we need to do. This tragedy has put our community in shock."
     
    Bridge River is a tiny aboriginal town located about nine kilometres northwest of Lillooet, in B.C.'s Interior.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Suspect In Letter Bomb That Injured Winnipeg Lawyer Seeking Bail

    Suspect In Letter Bomb That Injured Winnipeg Lawyer Seeking Bail
    Guido Amsel is facing more than a dozen criminal charges related to  the July 3 blast.

    Suspect In Letter Bomb That Injured Winnipeg Lawyer Seeking Bail

    B.C. Communities On Evacuation Alert Over Concerns About Washington State Blaze

    B.C. Communities On Evacuation Alert Over Concerns About Washington State Blaze
    GRAND FORKS, B.C. — Evacuation alerts have been issued in southeastern British Columbia over fears that so-called ember showers from a Washington state wildfire could ignite flames north of the border. 

    B.C. Communities On Evacuation Alert Over Concerns About Washington State Blaze

    Mohamed Fahmy Braces For Verdict In Cairo, Wants Nnightmare' To End

    A Cairo court is expected — once again — to deliver a verdict Saturday for the Canadian journalist on trial for widely denounced terror charges and Fahmy is cautiously optimistic.

    Mohamed Fahmy Braces For Verdict In Cairo, Wants Nnightmare' To End

    June Emails Urged Stephen Harper To Open MP Expenses To Auditor General

    OTTAWA — Emails sent to Prime Minister Stephen Harper in June suggested that some Canadians didn't trust politicians to police their own spending and wanted the auditor general to look at their books.

    June Emails Urged Stephen Harper To Open MP Expenses To Auditor General

    Alaskans Warm Up To B.C. Mines Minister But Still Demand Concrete Assurances

    It was the first time residents spoke directly with Bennett and gave him a tour along the Taku River, which they worry could become contaminated by a mining accident.

    Alaskans Warm Up To B.C. Mines Minister But Still Demand Concrete Assurances

    Nova Scotia Judge Reserves Decision On Law Inspired By Rehtaeh Parsons

    Nova Scotia Judge Reserves Decision On Law Inspired By Rehtaeh Parsons
     A judge reserved his decision today on a case that challenges on constitutional grounds Nova Scotia's groundbreaking anti-cyberbullying law.

    Nova Scotia Judge Reserves Decision On Law Inspired By Rehtaeh Parsons