Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Man Fatally Shot By Vancouver Police In Robbery; Officer, Canadian Tire Store Worker Stabbed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Nov, 2016 10:14 AM
    VANCOUVER — A man was fatally shot by Vancouver police Thursday afternoon after a police spokesman says he confronted officers when they were called to a robbery in progress at a Canadian Tire store.
     
    Sgt. Brian Montague said a police officer was stabbed by the suspect and an employee of the store was also stabbed during the incident. They were listed in stable condition in hospital and Montague said both were expected to survive.
     
    Police were called to the store near Grandview Highway and Rupert Street in east Vancouver shortly after 3 p.m. when they confronted the suspect as he ran from the Canadian Tire, he said.
     
    The officer, who was stabbed multiple times, has been with the department for five years, he added.
     
    Montague said the suspect died at the scene.
     
    "When we hear that employees have been injured in that robbery, we want to be careful about how we proceed but we also want to make sure that we don't have someone going on some sort of a rampage inside the store," he said.
     
    "So as our officers went to go in to make sure everyone was OK, our suspect was coming out."
     

    He said it's unclear whether one or multiple officers fired shots at the suspect and the Independent Investigations Office will help determine that. The provincial police watchdog investigates when there has been a death or serious harm suffered in cases involving police to determine whether an officer may have committed an offence.
     
    Katarina Mitchell, 24, said she was in the upstairs parking lot of the Canadian Tire when she saw employees and customers running out of the store. Moments later, she said she heard sirens and police cars came flying into the lot.
     
    Several officers got out of the cars carrying guns just before a large man wearing a green jacket came out of Canadian Tire holding what appeared to be a rifle and a spray can, she said.
     
    The man sprayed something at the first officer who approached and a substance appeared to get in his eyes, she said, adding that a second officer then came after the man from behind and the two started "wrestling" on the ground.
     
     
    "Then you hear shots go off, bang, bang, bang," Mitchell said. "The guy is just dead on the ground there, not moving."
     
    Mitchell said about 15 police cars responded as well as several ambulances and fire trucks.
     
    "It's kind of scary," she said. "Especially living in this area, that something like this can happen so close to home. … It's lucky that more people didn't get hurt in this horrible situation."
     
    Chief Adam Palmer has visited the officer and his wife in hospital to offer support, said Montague.
     
    Montague didn't have any information about the suspect.
     
    "We don't know who he is," he said.
     
    He said police were following up unconfirmed reports of a second suspect. Officers entered the store to search for other suspects or victims but found none.
     
    Montague said the police department has counselling support for officers who are injured on the job. In his two decades as a police officer, he said he has been stabbed and shot at.
     
    "It's an unfortunate reality of our job."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trump, Trade And Immigration Raised In Conservative Leadership Debate

    Trump, Trade And Immigration Raised In Conservative Leadership Debate
    SASKATOON — Conservative leadership candidate Kellie Leitch says she's not endorsing U.S. president-elect Donald Trump, but says they share ideas on immigration.

    Trump, Trade And Immigration Raised In Conservative Leadership Debate

    Breaking Glass Ceilings 'just Got A Little Bit Harder' After Clinton Loss: Kathleen Wynne

    Breaking Glass Ceilings 'just Got A Little Bit Harder' After Clinton Loss: Kathleen Wynne
    TORONTO — Ontario's first female leader says the task of shattering glass ceilings "just got a little bit harder" after Hillary Clinton's loss to Donald Trump in the American election.

    Breaking Glass Ceilings 'just Got A Little Bit Harder' After Clinton Loss: Kathleen Wynne

    Some Canadians With Dual Citizenship Restricted On Using Foreign Passport

    Some Canadians With Dual Citizenship Restricted On Using Foreign Passport
    OTTAWA — A new rule requiring some Canadians with dual citizenship to use a Canadian passport to enter the country takes effect today.

    Some Canadians With Dual Citizenship Restricted On Using Foreign Passport

    Health Authority Says 16 Nova Scotians Have Chosen Assisted Death

    HALIFAX — Sixteen Nova Scotians have died through assisted suicide, according to the provincial health authority.

    Health Authority Says 16 Nova Scotians Have Chosen Assisted Death

    Huge Spike In U.S. Web Traffic Before Canadian Immigration Site Crash

    Huge Spike In U.S. Web Traffic Before Canadian Immigration Site Crash
    Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada says there were more than 200,000 users accessing the site around 11 p.m. on election night and American IP addresses accounted for about half of that figure.

    Huge Spike In U.S. Web Traffic Before Canadian Immigration Site Crash

    Gabriel Klein, Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford High School Student Maintains Silence

    Gabriel Klein, Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford High School Student Maintains Silence
    SURREY, B.C. — The case against a man accused of stabbing two girls at an Abbotsford, B.C., high school will move ahead despite the man's persistent silence, a judge says.

    Gabriel Klein, Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford High School Student Maintains Silence