Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP Kill Masked Man At BC Hydro Public Information Session On Site C Dam In Dawson Creek

The Canadian Press, 17 Jul, 2015 01:02 PM
    DAWSON CREEK, B.C. — Mounties have shot and killed a man outside a BC Hydro public information session on the planned Site C hydroelectric dam in the province's Peace region.
     
    Dawson Creek RCMP said Thursday evening they were called about a man damaging property and disrupting the hearing.
     
    Police said that when they arrived, they encountered a masked man outside the venue and believed he was connected to the complaint.
     
    RCMP said despite attempts to de-escalate the situation, there was a confrontation and the unidentified man was shot and later died in hospital.
     
    Mounties secured the scene pending the arrival of a team from the Independent Investigations Office on Friday morning.
     
    The police watchdog investigates all officer-involved incidents in British Columbia that result in death or serious injury.
     
    Spokeswoman Kellie Kilpatrick said a forensic specialist was to take over the scene while investigators spoke with witnesses and secured any video.
     
    Kilpatrick said it was early in the investigation and she did not have further details about the confrontation between the man and police.
     
    She said the IIO would not release any details about the identities of the officers or the deceased.
     
    "The information we have is that a male was creating a disturbance, allegedly destroying property," she said. "The individual was escorted from the event and subsequently came into contact with police just outside.
     
     
    "Our information from police is that he was non-compliant with their directions and an altercation took place and he was shot."
     
    The B.C. government granted approval on July 7 for the first phase of construction to start on the massive Site C project on the Peace River.
     
    Several lawsuits by environmental groups, citizens and First Nations have been launched to try to stop construction of the controversial dam and are proceeding through the courts.
     
    The meeting at the Fixx Urban Grill in Dawson Creek's Stonebridge Hotel was the last of five public consultations held in the province this month.
     
    BC Hydro has yet to issue a statement on the shooting.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey Shooting That Sent Two To Hospital Appears Targeted: RCMP

    Surrey Shooting That Sent Two To Hospital Appears Targeted: RCMP
    Residents reported hearing gunshots in their neighbourhood at about 1 a.m. Friday, and RCMP arrived to find the two wounded men.

    Surrey Shooting That Sent Two To Hospital Appears Targeted: RCMP

    Journalist's Defamation Trial Against John Furlong Draws To A Close

    Journalist's Defamation Trial Against John Furlong Draws To A Close
    VANCOUVER — Former Vancouver Olympics boss John Furlong defamed a journalist when he portrayed her as heartless, cruel and callous, said her lawyer as a heated civil trial drew to a close Friday.

    Journalist's Defamation Trial Against John Furlong Draws To A Close

    Concerns For Fish, Water Supply Grow Amid High B.C. Temperatures

    Concerns For Fish, Water Supply Grow Amid High B.C. Temperatures
    VANCOUVER — Environmental concerns are rising along with the soaring temperatures in British Columbia, where a heat wave has generated worries about forests fires, water supplies and fish habitats.

    Concerns For Fish, Water Supply Grow Amid High B.C. Temperatures

    B.C. Crown Appeals Second-Degree Murder Conviction To Supreme Court Of Canada

    B.C. Crown Appeals Second-Degree Murder Conviction To Supreme Court Of Canada
    In February 2013, Michael Newman was convicted of the first-degree murder of Mark Rozen who nine years earlier advertised a diamond engagement ring in a newspaper. 

    B.C. Crown Appeals Second-Degree Murder Conviction To Supreme Court Of Canada

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group
    VICTORIA — Glass sponge reefs in British Columbia's Hecate Strait that were once considered extinct are now the focus of a federal protection effort that a conservation group calls too weak to save the fragile undersea treasures.

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group

    WestJet Plane Lands In Saskatoon After Threat; 147 Passengers And 6 Crew Aboard

    WestJet Plane Lands In Saskatoon After Threat; 147 Passengers And 6 Crew Aboard
    Police in Saskatoon said in a news release that the force's bomb disposal unit responded to John Diefenbaker Airport after a threat was made about an 

    WestJet Plane Lands In Saskatoon After Threat; 147 Passengers And 6 Crew Aboard