Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

No foul play suspected in cadets' deaths: CAF

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 May, 2022 12:23 PM
  • No foul play suspected in cadets' deaths: CAF

Foul play from an outside source is not suspected in the deaths of four cadets at Canada's Royal Military College last week, the Department of National Defence said Wednesday. 

The department said the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service, the local military police detachment and police in Kingston, Ont., where the college is located, are supporting an ongoing coroner's investigation into the incident.

"At this time, there is no reason to believe there is any foul play from an outside source related to this incident," the department said in a written statement. 

No further information will be released until the coroner's report is completed, the department said. 

Officer cadets Jack Hogarth, Andrei Honciu, Broden Murphy and Andrés Salek, who were all poised to graduate, died early Friday morning on the Kingston campus when their vehicle plunged into the water at Point Frederick peninsula, where Lake Ontario meets the St. Lawrence River

Commodore Josee Kurtz, the head of the school, identified the cadets late Friday and said the college community was in mourning.

"The entire RMC community is devastated by this tragic loss,'' Kurtz said last week. 

Hogarth was in military and strategic studies and hoped to be an officer in an armoured regiment. Honciu was studying business administration and planned to be a logistics officer.

Murphy, also a business administration student, was working to become an aerospace environment controller. Salek, a student of military and strategic studies, also wanted to be an armoured officer.

The Department of National Defence is asking anyone with information about the fatal incident to contact investigators.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. doctor suspended over COVID-19 allegations

B.C. doctor suspended over COVID-19 allegations
The interim suspension order, effective March 24 but posted on the college's website on Monday, affects Dr. Stephen Malthouse, a family practitioner on Denman Island.

B.C. doctor suspended over COVID-19 allegations

Liberals to take time on promised child-care law

Liberals to take time on promised child-care law
Karina Gould says the legislation would also put into law the principles that provinces and territories agreed to in funding agreements, including to cut parent fees and create more spaces.    

Liberals to take time on promised child-care law

556 COVID19 cases over 3 days

556 COVID19 cases over 3 days
There are 288 individuals hospitalized with COVID-19 and 48 are in intensive care. In the past 72 hours, six new deaths have been reported, for an overall total of 2,989.

556 COVID19 cases over 3 days

Zelenskyy briefs Trudeau amid talks with Russia

Zelenskyy briefs Trudeau amid talks with Russia
Prior to the talks with Russia, Zelenskyy also said he was open to compromise on the future of Ukraine's eastern Donbas region, which the Kremlin has claimed as its territory and where eight years of fighting prior to the recent Russian invasion left 14,000 dead.

Zelenskyy briefs Trudeau amid talks with Russia

Canada offers language, job help for Ukrainians

Canada offers language, job help for Ukrainians
Applications opened March 17 for a program to allow an unlimited number of Ukrainians fleeing war in their home country to come to Canada for up to three years while they decide whether they want to apply for permanent residency.

Canada offers language, job help for Ukrainians

Five killed in Brampton, Ont., house fire

Five killed in Brampton, Ont., house fire
Randy Narine, a Brampton firefighter who said he is related to the family, identified the parents who died Monday as Nazir Ali, 28, and Raven Alisha Ali-O’dea, 29. He identified the children who lost their lives as Layla Rose Ali-O’dea, Jayden Prince Ali-O’dea and Alia Marilyn Ali-O’dea.

Five killed in Brampton, Ont., house fire