Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Co-Workers Raise Money, Spirits, Of Cabbie Stabbed In Kamloops, B.C.

The Canadian Press, 02 Sep, 2016 02:22 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A taxi driver who was critically injured last month says he is overwhelmed by the generosity of his co-workers in Kamloops, B.C., and is already looking forward to returning to the job he loves. 
     
    Cal Huntington was left clinging to life on Aug. 24 when a routine early morning turned violent.
     
    "I'm usually really good at reading people but this guy set off no warning bells whatsoever," Huntington said of a suspect who is accused of stabbing Huntington multiple times.
     
    "As soon as I put (the cab) in park he started attacking me."
     
    Huntington said the man also demanded cash before fleeing.
     
    Despite his injuries, which included a collapsed lung and a punctured vein in his neck, Huntington remembered the direction his attacker fled and gave crucial information to police.
     
    It wasn't until much later that he learned how badly he was hurt.
     
    "When they brought me out of sedation on Thursday afternoon is when I started realizing how serious things actually were," Huntington said.
     
    A 19-year-old man has been charged with aggravated assault.
     
     
    Kami Cabs general manager Satinder Mann said Huntington is considered part of the family and everyone in the company was concerned.
     
    "At the beginning the injuries were life-threatening, so we were there a couple days to see him," said Mann.
     
    "The doctors were also worried about him, but after a couple of days they were like, 'OK, he's getting better and better and better.' "
     
    Huntington was discharged on Monday, but he says he suffered a seizure linked to his neck wound so he won't be permitted to drive for a month.
     
    Management and staff at the cab company launched a fundraiser and within a week had raised $5,175, Mann said.
     
    Huntington considers the stabbing a "freak incident," and said it hasn't soured his view of the job or humanity.
     
    "Well, I know after a month of doing nothing I'm going to want to get back out there," he said. "I really enjoy my job. I get to meet all sorts of different people, and I have to say everyone, from down below all the way up to the professionals that I take in my car, I've always said my job is entertaining."
     
    After experiencing the generosity of his co-workers, he's also excited to see them again.
     
    "If anything can make you believe in people, this is it."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised
    Residents of a Rocky Mountain community are being chastised after nine black bears were killed in a single week for raiding garbage cans and becoming too accustomed to humans.

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT
    GURDEV “Dave” Hair, 45, of Abbotsford was killed in a shooting on Wednesday night in the 3100-block of Crown Court of Abbotsford, the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) announced on Thursday. He was known to police.

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently
    US presidential candidate Donald Trump has more psychopathic traits than Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, a new Oxford study has claimed.

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — Shergo Kurdi lifts his shirt to reveal a pale, mottled patchwork of burn scars on his belly and chest — a legacy, he says, of years spent ironing fabric in a Turkish clothing factory after he and his family fled war-torn Syria in 2012.

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana
    VANCOUVER — A study by researchers at the University of British Columbia suggests that while the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana causes laziness, adding a medicinal component of pot doesn't change that behaviour.

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    Extremist Literature Common In Canadian Mosques, Islamic School Libraries, Study Says

    The study, titled "Lovers of the Death"? — Islamist Extremism in Mosques and Schools, says what worried them was not the presence of extremist literature, but that they found nothing but such writings in several libraries.

    Extremist Literature Common In Canadian Mosques, Islamic School Libraries, Study Says