Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP Investigating Surrey's Gun Violence Problem, Making Arrests, Seizing Drugs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Apr, 2016 12:03 PM
    SURREY, B.C. — Mounties in Surrey, B.C., say they investigating more than two dozen shooting complaints that have left one person dead and five injured so far this year.
     
    Officers have responded to 28 complaints since Jan. 1, nine involving shots being fired into a building or residence and two of bullet casings being found.
     
    Mounties say the incidents are not believed to be linked to groups involved in last year's drug violence, though the complaints are tied to the drug trade.
     
     
    Gunfire on Surrey streets made headlines in early 2015, when police said a group of South Asians and those of Somali descent were involved in a low-level drug conflict. 
     
    Mounties say four people have been arrested and that the March 16 seizure of $4.5 million in drugs was one of the largest in the city's history.
     
    "It was an ongoing investigation, you know, a continued strategy on our part, that we pulled this individual over," said Surrey RCMP Superintendent Shawn Gill, adding that no weapons were found in the vehicle.
     
     
    "We are attacking this situation now and we are attacking it aggressively," RCMP Supt. Shawn Gill says in a news release. "With the intelligence we are receiving, our proactive enforcement teams are making it very difficult for these people to conduct their illegal business in our city."
     
    Mounties say 30-year-old Pardip Hayer of Abbotsford faces four counts of trafficking in a controlled substance arising out of the seizure earlier this month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    La Loche Gets More Help For Police-based Victims Services After Shooting

    The Ministry of Justice is giving an organization called North Sask. Victims Services $60,000 for a second police-based victim services position in La Loche.

    La Loche Gets More Help For Police-based Victims Services After Shooting

    Manitoba Backbencher Faces Hurdles In Getting Sick-Note Bill Passed

    Manitoba Backbencher Faces Hurdles In Getting Sick-Note Bill Passed
     A proposed law on employee sick notes appears to be on life support at the Manitoba legislature.

    Manitoba Backbencher Faces Hurdles In Getting Sick-Note Bill Passed

    Atlantic Canada Expresses Doubts About Carbon Tax On Electricity

    Arriving for talks on climate change with the prime minister and premiers, Stephen McNeil says Atlantic Canadians already pay the highest electricity rates in the country.

    Atlantic Canada Expresses Doubts About Carbon Tax On Electricity

    Elephant, Not Culture At Issue In B.C. Woman's Campaign To Save Japan's Oldest

    Elephant, Not Culture At Issue In B.C. Woman's Campaign To Save Japan's Oldest
    All Carol Buckley wishes for her first encounter with Japan's oldest elephant is that zookeepers accompany her to Hanako's concrete enclosure and allow her to peacefully observe.

    Elephant, Not Culture At Issue In B.C. Woman's Campaign To Save Japan's Oldest

    Climate Change: Aboriginal Leaders Tell Trudeau They Want Seat At The Table

    Climate Change: Aboriginal Leaders Tell Trudeau They Want Seat At The Table
     Indigenous leaders told Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the premiers Wednesday that they want a role in developing climate change policy. 

    Climate Change: Aboriginal Leaders Tell Trudeau They Want Seat At The Table

    Man, Woman's Body Found In West Kelowna, B.C., Police Investigating

    Man, Woman's Body Found In West Kelowna, B.C., Police Investigating
    Police in West Kelowna, B.C., are investigating after two bodies were discovered in a residential area.

    Man, Woman's Body Found In West Kelowna, B.C., Police Investigating