Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manslaughter Charge Recommended In 60-Year-Old's Death After Sucker-Punch Attack

The Canadian Press, 27 Nov, 2015 02:03 PM
    VANCOUVER — A manslaughter charge has been recommended for a 26-year-old man in the death of a Vancouver resident who was punched in the head.
     
    Vancouver police say the 60-year-old man died in hospital after being injured in an argument outside of a downtown nightclub.
     
    The announcement of a possible charge comes one day after the city's police force reported that one-punch attacks have killed three people and seriously injured several others over the past year.
     
    On Friday, police said the victim initially thought he had suffered only a minor head injury when a punch knocked him to the ground.
     
    They say he went to hospital, but refused treatment and left, and paramedics later found him unresponsive in his apartment building with a serious brain bleed.
     
    Police said alcohol and bravado appear to be fuelling the spate of unrelated attacks that have caused serious injuries in minor disputes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose

    More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose
    The new interim Conservative leader is promising to change the party's tone, but Rona Ambrose was not as willing Wednesday to say she would abandon the practice of using cultural wedge issues as a political tactic.

    More Clarity From Liberals Needed To Calm Current Tensions: Rona Ambrose

    RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January

    RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January
    A hearing on alleged violations of the Canada Labour Code by the RCMP related to the force's response to a deadly shooting rampage last year in Moncton, N.B., has been adjourned until next year.

    RCMP Hearing In Moncton On Labour Code Charges Adjourned Until January

    Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO

    Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO
    Canada's budget watchdog says a series of improvements to benefits for veterans, introduced in the waning days of the Harper government, will likely cost the federal treasury $231.6 million over the next decade.

    Tories Parade Of Veterans Benefits Changes To Cost $231.6 Million: PBO

    Saskatoon's Icy Streets Get The Better Of Stand-Up Comedian Kevin Hart

    Saskatoon's Icy Streets Get The Better Of Stand-Up Comedian Kevin Hart
    SASKATOON — A winter storm that's hitting parts of the Prairies is more than a match for comedian Kevin Hart.

    Saskatoon's Icy Streets Get The Better Of Stand-Up Comedian Kevin Hart

    Calgary Charter Airline Offers To Help Bring Syrian Refugees To Canada

    Calgary Charter Airline Offers To Help Bring Syrian Refugees To Canada
    CALGARY — A Calgary-based charter airline is offering to help the federal government bring Syrian refugees to Canada.

    Calgary Charter Airline Offers To Help Bring Syrian Refugees To Canada

    Premier Brad Wall Says Saskatchewan Will Set Up A Refugee Settlement Centre

    Premier Brad Wall Says Saskatchewan Will Set Up A Refugee Settlement Centre
    The announcement comes just days after Wall said the federal government should suspend its plan to bring in 25,000 Syrian refugees by year's end because of safety concerns.

    Premier Brad Wall Says Saskatchewan Will Set Up A Refugee Settlement Centre