Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Randeep Singh Match, 36, Pleads Guilty To Manslaughter In Death Of Tarsem Dhaliwal

The Canadian Press, 01 Feb, 2018 11:08 AM

    SURREY, B.C. — An Abbotsford, B.C., man has pleaded guilty to a manslaughter for the death in 2014 of Tarsem Dhaliwal.

     

    The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 36-year-old Randeep Singh Match will return to court next month for sentencing.

     

    Cpl. Frank Jang says Match pleaded guilty to the lesser offence of manslaughter in January after being charged nearly four years earlier with Dhaliwal's murder.

     

    The victim was last seen on Jan. 17, 2014, leaving his Surrey home to meet a friend.

     

    Surrey RCMP found his body inside his car four days later and Match was charged several months later.

     

    Jang says the guilty plea in the homicide investigation speaks to the efforts and dedication by police investigators involved in the case.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate

    B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia man is back among the living after twice being declared dead by the federal government in a bureaucratic mix-up that began when his social insurance number was incorrectly placed on his mother's death certificate.

    B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate

    Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford

    Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford
    Abbotsford Police Patrol Officers responded to the 2200 block of Windsor Street for a report of a home invasion this morning at 4:28 am.

    Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford

    Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism

    Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism
    The Thunder Bay Police Service says the working group will include members of the service and volunteers from the community.

    Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism

    U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement

    U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement
    Canadian courts must accept the agreed statement of facts that underpinned Khadr's war-crimes conviction in 2010, they argue, regardless of whether he lied under oath when he admitted to tossing a hand grenade that killed the soldier eight years earlier.

    U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement

    Low Uptake For New Immigration Program In Nova Scotia, Numbers Reveal

    Lena Diab says she remains optimistic the program will be a "wonderful tool" — it's aimed at attracting and retaining skilled immigrants for the workforce, as a way of supporting population growth and addressing labour shortages.

    Low Uptake For New Immigration Program In Nova Scotia, Numbers Reveal

    Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference

    Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference
    The mother of a University of Calgary student convicted of sexual interference says the school has asked him to stay away from campus as an online petition demanding that he be expelled grows.

    Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference