Close X
Saturday, October 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Thousands march to funeral for murdered B.C. Mountie Rick O'Brien, 51

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Oct, 2023 03:33 PM
  • Thousands march to funeral for murdered B.C. Mountie Rick O'Brien, 51

Thousands of officers in uniform filled the event centre in Langley, B.C., to attend a regimental funeral for RCMP Const. Rick O'Brien who was killed last month in Coquitlam.

Officers from around the province, including RCMP, other police services, firefighters, military and others attended the ceremony for O'Brien, who is the tenth police officer to be killed in Canada since September of last year.

The father of six was 51 when he was killed Sept. 22 while he and other officers were executing a search warrant at a home.

The mourning officers had marched to the event centre in a procession on Wednesday, behind the hearse carrying O'Brien's coffin, the RCMP Pipe Band and a riderless horse to symbolize a fallen member. 

Langley resident Ingrid Davies said that as the mother of a Mountie she decided to attend the procession to pay tribute to the fallen officer.

"It hits very close to home when something like this happens but we just try to stay positive and we hope his family can find some peace," she said.

Betty Lew, whose daughter is also a Mountie, said every parent of an officer worries about their child’s safety when they are on the job, and she felt it was important to pay tribute to O'Brien. 

“They serve the citizens all around. They protect us. So, we should be able to protect them."

O'Brien came to the Mounties late in life, joining in 2016 after a career of working with at-risk children, and was decorated early in his career for bravery after helping to rescue victims from a home invasion. 

Supt. Wendy Mehat, the officer in charge at Ridge Meadows RCMP, where O'Brien spent all of his career, said after O'Brien was killed that he loved visiting schools and helping students, while calling his death senseless and heartbreaking.

A fundraiser organized by the National Police Federation Benevolent Foundation has raised more than $150,000 for O'Brien's family.

A 25-year-old man has been charged with first-degree murder in the officer's death.  

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Police-reported hate crimes rise again: StatCan

Police-reported hate crimes rise again: StatCan
It says the victims and those accused of reported hate crimes are most often men and boys. In British Columbia, religious hate crime reports more than doubled to 150 in 2021, while in Alberta they tripled to 91 incidents.

Police-reported hate crimes rise again: StatCan

Liberals to create corporate ownership registry

Liberals to create corporate ownership registry
Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne has tabled legislation that would create a corporate beneficial ownership registry. The prospective registry is expected to have the goal of making it easier to identify owners of corporations who launder money, commit financial crimes or evade taxes.    

Liberals to create corporate ownership registry

Emergency visa for Ukrainians extended by months

Emergency visa for Ukrainians extended by months
The deadline to apply for a three-year emergency visa was originally March 31, but Ukrainians and their family members will now be able to apply until July 15. After that date, Ukrainians will still be able to apply for traditional work, study and visitor permits to come to Canada after the application period expires, but they will be charged the usual fees associated with those applications.    

Emergency visa for Ukrainians extended by months

Security tightens as Biden set to arrive in Ottawa

Security tightens as Biden set to arrive in Ottawa
In downtown Ottawa Wednesday, about 20 police vehicles circled the area as U.S. flags were strung up near Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's official office and the main street in front of Parliament Hill. Meanwhile, workers were busy installing fences to prepare for the visit.    

Security tightens as Biden set to arrive in Ottawa

Judge awards legal costs to former Vancouver mayor

Judge awards legal costs to former Vancouver mayor
B.C. Supreme Court Justice Wendy Baker's judgment says the defamation claims had "substantial merit," but found Stewart's statements were not malicious and were fair game because the issues were in the public interest and had been widely reported.

Judge awards legal costs to former Vancouver mayor

Ottawa to spend $1.5B on drugs for rare diseases

Ottawa to spend $1.5B on drugs for rare diseases
The federal government says it will spend up to $1.5 billion over the next three years to improve access to drugs used to treat rare diseases. Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos says up to $1.4 billion of that money will be used to help provinces and territories expand coverage of new and existing drugs that treat rare diseases.

Ottawa to spend $1.5B on drugs for rare diseases