Close X
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

IIO clears Vancouver police officers in shooting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Aug, 2021 01:01 PM
  • IIO clears Vancouver police officers in shooting

British Columbia's police watchdog has cleared Vancouver officers in the fatal shooting of a man in the Downtown Eastside earlier this year.

A report released by the Independent Investigations Office Tuesday said the officers' use of force in the shooting on Jan. 5 was "justified, necessary and proportionate."

"Simply put, they had no choice," said Ronald MacDonald, chief civilian director of the Independent Investigations Office, in the report.

Officers responded to an early morning call from the Salvation Army, where a man who appeared to be drunk was banging on windows and had reportedly been seen carrying a sword, the report said, noting interviews from civilian witnesses and paramedics.

"He was then observed inside the building, naked, carrying a large sword, and was seen smashing the sword against another resident's room door," the report said.

The officers feared the man, who was not named by the oversight agency, would either stab them or one of the bystanders across the street, it said.

The report said the officers were not carrying a stun gun and fired a total of five shots from their firearms from about three metres away.

"The entire confrontation, from the time the subject officers exited their police vehicle to the shooting, took no more than five to six seconds," it said.

The report said the man was taken to hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

MacDonald said in the report that the officers' "clear and immediate duty" at that time was to stop the threat.

"It would have been entirely inappropriate for the officers to attempt to flee, leaving a number of bystanders in great danger," he said.

Any other use of force would "almost certainly have been ineffective against the charging, sword-wielding" suspect, he said.

"I do not consider that there are reasonable grounds to believe that an officer may have committed an offence."

MORE National ARTICLES

Partial brick of suspected cocaine seized by Surrey Gang Enforcement Team

Partial brick of suspected cocaine seized by Surrey Gang Enforcement Team
This amount of cocaine when packaged for streel level sale is 1,225 doses, the equivalent of 25 busloads of people.

Partial brick of suspected cocaine seized by Surrey Gang Enforcement Team

Canadian vaccine maker touts promising results

Canadian vaccine maker touts promising results
Calgary-based Providence Therapeutics says its vaccine produced no serious adverse events and developed good antibodies against COVID-19 that "compare favourably" with the two mRNA vaccines already on the market from Pfizer and Moderna.

Canadian vaccine maker touts promising results

Greyhound Canada permanently cuts all bus routes

Greyhound Canada permanently cuts all bus routes
The company said tickets for travel after Thursday will be refunded. Customers with a valid travel voucher can also request a refund. 

Greyhound Canada permanently cuts all bus routes

Kenney faces call from within caucus to resign

Kenney faces call from within caucus to resign
Senior backbench member Todd Loewen, in a letter posted on Facebook in the pre-dawn hours Thursday, called on Kenney to resign. Loewen said he no longer has confidence in the premier.

Kenney faces call from within caucus to resign

Morneau, not Trudeau, violated ethics rules: Dion Stephanie

Morneau, not Trudeau, violated ethics rules: Dion Stephanie
The commissioner says he was asked to investigate Morneau by several MPs because of what some believed to be close ties between his family and the charity, founded by brothers Marc and Craig Kielburger.

Morneau, not Trudeau, violated ethics rules: Dion Stephanie

Residency for families of plane-crash victims

Residency for families of plane-crash victims
The policy applies to people currently in Canada, and anyone who made a refugee claim after these two disasters happened is also eligible to apply under the new policy.    

Residency for families of plane-crash victims