Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Independent Probe After Man Sets Himself Ablaze In Vancouver Restaurant

The Canadian Press, 16 Mar, 2018 07:33 PM
    VANCOUVER — A man who splashed gasoline over himself at an east Vancouver fast food restaurant is in hospital with serious burns and independent investigators are examining how police handled the situation.
     
     
    A news release from Vancouver police says the man, in his 30s, was carrying a gas can when he entered the restaurant just after 9 p.m. Thursday and threatened to harm himself.
     
     
    Officers and firefighters responded, but police say negotiations were unsuccessful.
     
     
    They say he ignited the gas he had spilled over himself and part of the restaurant.
     
     
    Police say the man was subdued by non-lethal ammunition and firefighters used water to put out the flames.
     
     
    The Independent Investigations Office, the organization that probes all police-involved cases of death or serious injury, has taken over the case.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    UBC Resident Drives Off Road In Vancouver's Second Fatal Crash This Year

    UBC Resident Drives Off Road In Vancouver's Second Fatal Crash This Year
    Vancouver Police are investigating an early morning crash that left one man dead on Sunday.

    UBC Resident Drives Off Road In Vancouver's Second Fatal Crash This Year

    Volunteers Offer Free Eye Care To Seniors In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    Volunteers Offer Free Eye Care To Seniors In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside
    A gaggle of seniors waits patiently inside the doors of the Downtown Eastside Neighbourhood House, where the sound of Mandarin and Cantonese voices fills the air.

    Volunteers Offer Free Eye Care To Seniors In Vancouver's Downtown Eastside

    Nova Scotia University's Probe Of Controversial Professor Intensifies Free-Speech Debate

    Nova Scotia University's Probe Of Controversial Professor Intensifies Free-Speech Debate
    A small-town university in Atlantic Canada has been thrust into the epicentre of a national debate about free speech on campus, amid new allegations a controversial professor has made "racist and transphobic comments" in class.

    Nova Scotia University's Probe Of Controversial Professor Intensifies Free-Speech Debate

    Self-Driving ‘Sailbot' Returns Home To Vancouver After Being Lost At Sea

    Self-Driving ‘Sailbot' Returns Home To Vancouver After Being Lost At Sea
    She lost her sail and has a few scratches, but a robotic sailboat has returned home in relatively good condition after being lost at sea.

    Self-Driving ‘Sailbot' Returns Home To Vancouver After Being Lost At Sea

    Liberals Pour More Money Into Tax Filing Program For Homeless, Newcomers

    In just over a week, six volunteers will start filing up to 500 tax returns for people with little to no income at the Shepherds of Good Hope homeless shelter in downtown Ottawa.

    Liberals Pour More Money Into Tax Filing Program For Homeless, Newcomers

    Regulator Rejects B.C. Government's Promised Hydro Rate Freeze

    Regulator Rejects B.C. Government's Promised Hydro Rate Freeze
    VICTORIA — Hydro rates in British Columbia will increase three per cent in April after the province's independent energy regulator overruled a government promise to freeze rates for one year.

    Regulator Rejects B.C. Government's Promised Hydro Rate Freeze