Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Amandeep Bath Murder: Parminder Basran, Bhabjit Aujla Sentenced

Darpan News Desk, 13 Apr, 2017 03:49 PM
  • Amandeep Bath Murder: Parminder Basran, Bhabjit Aujla Sentenced
Amandeep Bath, 27, was shot in the head in Surrey 13 years ago by two men, Parminder Basran and Bhabjit Aujla, and today the two men have been sentenced in connection with his shooting death.
 
Parminder Singh Basran pleaded guilty to manslaughter in B.C. Provincial Court in New Westminster and Bhabjit Singh Aujla pleaded guilty to assault on March 3.
 
Basran  was sentenced Thursday to six years in prison while Bhabjit Singh Aujla was sentenced Thursday to time served, which worked out to 11 months.
 
Outside the courthouse Bath’s family gathered holding a picture of the young man and said they were grateful to have closure and find out what happened that night in 2004.
 
“It’s nice to see that after 12 years there’s some closure to be had,” Bath’s cousin, Harpreet Khela said.
 
“Everyone worked very hard on this case… As a family we believe that some sort of justice was served today. Nothing that they would do today would bring him back but we’re glad that there were two admissions. We’re glad that there were a lot of admissions of what happened that night.”
 
"It never really came out what the reason was [for his murder]. I don't know what the real reason was," said Khela, describing Bath as a quiet, hardworking accounting student who was the only child of a single mother.
 
"He was the oldest one, so he was the one all of us looked up to," said Khela.
 
"Amandeep was innocent. Just living his life and then all of a sudden this happened to him." 
 
Khela describes the last 13 years as a roller coaster of emotions for the Bath family.
 
Basran and Aujla were charged in the killing in 2005, but the charges against them were dropped for lack of evidence. 
 
 
Staff Sergeant Jennifer Pound, spokeswoman for the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, said IHIT’s cold case team is comprised of “highly skilled investigators who have provided justice to families who have tragically lost loved ones.”

MORE National ARTICLES

Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl

Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl
Owen Ross Gibson-Skeir, 21, was arrested a year ago in Halifax and pleaded guilty in December to three charges.

Halifax Man Sentenced To Seven Years For Trafficking 14-Year-Old Girl

Edmonton Warehouse Stabber Sentenced To Life, No Parole Eligibility For 25 Years

EDMONTON — A mentally ill Edmonton man who stabbed two co-workers to death and badly injured four others has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

Edmonton Warehouse Stabber Sentenced To Life, No Parole Eligibility For 25 Years

McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised

McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised
The company says the accessed information included names, addresses, phone numbers, employment histories and other standard job application information.

McDonald's Canada Says Info Of 95,000 Job Applicants Compromised

New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer

New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer
Sanjeev Kainth had a newborn daughter, and worked at River's Reach Pub as a line cook

New Westminster Pub Worker Sanjeev Kainth Dies After Falling On Meat Slicer

Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing

Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing
VANCOUVER — The mother of a man who drove drunk and killed three people on a British Columbia highway says her son's time in jail has made him a changed man.

Drunk Driver's Mom Apologizes To Victims' Families At Son's Sentencing Hearing

These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device

These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device
VANCOUVER — A group of students at the University of British Columbia have turned to technology in an effort to address the opioid crisis by creating a wearable device they say can detect an overdose.

These UBC Students Have Invented an Overdose Detection Device