Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

No Charges Against Two B.C. Officers Who Used Force During Separate Arrests

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 07 Nov, 2014 12:44 PM
  • No Charges Against Two B.C. Officers Who Used Force During Separate Arrests
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's criminal justice branch says no charges will be laid against two police officers involving separate allegations of use of force.
 
Spokesman Neil MacKenzie says the Crown probed one incident in Metro Vancouver and one in the Okanagan following investigations by B.C.'s police watchdog.
 
The Surrey incident in April 2013 involved a male suspect who was believed to have stolen a vehicle and was carrying a knife while high on drugs and possibly suffering from mental problems.
 
MacKenzie says an officer who found the man hiding in bushes released a police dog when the suspect refused to show his hands, and the dog bit the suspect again when its leash snapped.
 
MacKenzie says there's no evidence the officer's deployment of the dog involved inappropriate force, plus the suspect's recollection is unreliable because he admitted to investigators he was coming down from a drug-induced psychosis at the time.
 
The Penticton incident in April 2014 involved a woman who, after being arrested for public intoxication, was diagnosed with a broken wrist but the Crown says it's impossible to determine how and when she was injured.

MORE National ARTICLES

Doug Ford Kicks Off Toronto Mayoral Campaign

Doug Ford Kicks Off Toronto Mayoral Campaign
TORONTO - Rob Ford's brother Doug has officially kicked off his campaign for Toronto mayor, greeting a throng of supporters with a message from his ailing sibling.

Doug Ford Kicks Off Toronto Mayoral Campaign

Mountie joked about movie not sex act, breach of trust trial hears in B.C.

Mountie joked about movie not sex act, breach of trust trial hears in B.C.
KAMLOOPS, B.C. - Jokes about a soon-to-be released Hollywood movie, not images on closed-circuit video of two women having sex in a jail cell, are what caused a Mountie to laugh while surrounded by his colleagues, B.C. Supreme Court was told.

Mountie joked about movie not sex act, breach of trust trial hears in B.C.

RCMP: Man charged with second-degree murder in New Westminster knew victim

RCMP: Man charged with second-degree murder in New Westminster knew victim
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. - A charge of second-degree murder has been laid against a man in connection with a death in New Westminster, B.C.

RCMP: Man charged with second-degree murder in New Westminster knew victim

B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start

B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start
Results of a provincewide vote were announced late Thursday, with 86 per cent of the 31,741 teachers who cast ballots voting in favour of the agreement.

B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start

Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians

Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians
VANCOUVER - Nay may have won the day, but Caledonian-Canadians who supported Scottish independence in Thursday's historic referendum say their dream isn't dead, and at the very least change to the political system is coming.

Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians

Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms

Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms
VANCOUVER - B.C. Education Minister Peter Fassbender says he hopes the relationship between teachers and the province can be healed over the next five years of labour peace under the hard-fought new contract.

Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms