Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

HARJOT SINGH DEO Charged With Second-Degree Murder In BHAVKIRAN DHESI Killing

Darpan News Desk, 13 May, 2019 06:06 PM

    A man has been charged in the death of 19-year old Kiran Dhesi, whose body was found in a burned-out vehicle in Surrey, B.C., in August 2017.

     

    The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 21-year-old Harjot Singh Deo faces a second-degree murder charge.

     

    Supt. Donna Richardson, the officer in charge of the homicide team, says Deo was in a romantic relationship with Dhesi and was arrested by police when he landed at Vancouver's airport last week.

     
     

     
     

    Richardson told a news conference on Monday that Deo is known to police, but she wouldn't say in what capacity.

     

    She says they also know other people have "intimate knowledge" about the murder of Dhesi and police would like them to come forward.

     

    Investigators said in 2018 that they were looking for a grey Audi Q7 and a Dodge Ram truck, two vehicles believed to be involved in the homicide.

     
     
     
     

    Dhesi was a student at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in Surrey and just six months before her death she had a kidney transplant.

     

    Her family made an appeal to the public last year for help in solving her murder, saying she went through five years with an autoimmune disease and experienced dialysis, surgeries and complications, but she was strong and wanted to live.

     

    Her sister, Anjali Dhesi, said in the statement in August 2018 that when her sister had the transplant, it seemed like everything was finally going to be OK.

     
     
     
     
     
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Who's Who In The Federal Cabinet Shuffle: New Faces, And Old Faces In New Places

    David Lametti loves the law, he said just after being sworn in as Canada's new justice minister.

    Who's Who In The Federal Cabinet Shuffle: New Faces, And Old Faces In New Places

    Saudi Teen's Flight Has Implications For Saudi Women Left Behind: Analysis

    OTTAWA — Canada's acceptance of a Saudi Arabian teenager seeking asylum is sparking debate within the country about loosening laws restricting women's freedom, but also a backlash that could initially repress more women, analysts say.

    Saudi Teen's Flight Has Implications For Saudi Women Left Behind: Analysis

    Canada Helping Young Saudi Refugee Won't Hurt Raif Badawi's Case, Wife Says

    Canada Helping Young Saudi Refugee Won't Hurt Raif Badawi's Case, Wife Says
    Ensaf Haidar said the Canadian government did the right thing in granting refugee status to the 18-year-old woman who drew global attention after fleeing her allegedly abusive family.

    Canada Helping Young Saudi Refugee Won't Hurt Raif Badawi's Case, Wife Says

    Canadian Air Traffic Controllers Buy Pizza For U.S. Colleagues Hit By Shutdown

    Canadian Air Traffic Controllers Buy Pizza For U.S. Colleagues Hit By Shutdown
    Canadian air traffic controllers have bought hundreds of pizzas for their American counterparts over the past few days in what has become an industry-wide show of support during the U.S. government's partial shutdown.

    Canadian Air Traffic Controllers Buy Pizza For U.S. Colleagues Hit By Shutdown

    China Acting 'Arbitrarily' In Imposing Drug Case Death Sentence: Justin Trudeau

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he's very concerned to see China "acting arbitrarily" by applying the death penalty to a Canadian convicted of drug trafficking.

    China Acting 'Arbitrarily' In Imposing Drug Case Death Sentence: Justin Trudeau

    Chinese Court Awards Death Penalty To Canadian For Drug Peddling

    Chinese Court Awards Death Penalty To Canadian For Drug Peddling
    A Chinese Court Sentenced A Canadian Man To Death Monday In A Sudden Retrial In A Drug Smuggling Case That Is Likely To Escalate Tensions Between The Countries Over The Arrest Of A Top Chinese Technology Executive.

    Chinese Court Awards Death Penalty To Canadian For Drug Peddling