Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Transit Police Shooting In Surrey Under Investigation, Watchdog Interviews Witnesses

IANS, 29 Dec, 2014 01:43 PM
  • Transit Police Shooting In Surrey Under Investigation, Watchdog Interviews Witnesses
SURREY, B.C. — Investigators with B.C.'s police watchdog have conducted about 20 interviews with witnesses who were inside a Surrey, B.C., grocery store when transit police officers shot a man.
 
A spokeswoman with the Independent Investigations Office says it has also reviewed video from within the Safeway store and recovered physical evidence from the scene.
 
The incident occurred just after 8 a.m. Sunday when officers responded to a complaint of a disturbance inside the store and fired their guns at a man who later died of his injuries.
 
IIO spokeswoman Kellie Kilpatrick wouldn't say if the man was harming himself — as has been reported — until her office can speak confidently that that is true.
 
Kilpatrick says despite the fact that B.C. police services are prohibited from speaking to media about investigations involving the IIO, a transit police spokeswoman provided information to news outlets on Sunday.
 
Transit police media advisor Anne Drennan says when she spoke to media it was just before she received word the IIO had taken over the investigation.
 
Drennan says transit officers received a call Sunday morning that a man had gone behind the counter of a convenience store just 300 metres from Surrey Central SkyTrain station and demanded a knife.
 
She says officers then heard on RCMP radio channels about the disturbance inside the Safeway so they responded to the nearby store.
 
Drennan says she cannot comment on what occurred inside the Safeway due to the IIO's investigation.
 
The IIO is still waiting for the results of the autopsy, which the BC Coroners Service is responsible.

MORE National ARTICLES

Jobs focus of Chinese trade mission: Quebec Premier

Jobs focus of Chinese trade mission: Quebec Premier
BEIJING - Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said he never once mentioned the issue of human rights with Chinese officials on a trade mission with two other Canadian premiers to the Asian country.

Jobs focus of Chinese trade mission: Quebec Premier

Truce In Manitoba Government Infighting

Truce In Manitoba Government Infighting
WINNIPEG - Five senior cabinet ministers who have challenged the Manitoba premier's leadership have agreed to an uneasy truce, but questions remain as to whether Greg Selinger can survive the revolt and to when he will recall the legislature.

Truce In Manitoba Government Infighting

Alberta Allocates More Money For Legal Aid Making It Easier For Low-income Earners To Qualify

Alberta Allocates More Money For Legal Aid Making It Easier For Low-income Earners To Qualify
CALGARY - The Alberta government is increasing funding for legal aid and making it easier for low-income earners to qualify.

Alberta Allocates More Money For Legal Aid Making It Easier For Low-income Earners To Qualify

Land from park in Nisga'a territory could be removed for proposed B.C. pipeline

Land from park in Nisga'a territory could be removed for proposed B.C. pipeline
VICTORIA — The B.C. government has introduced legislation that could allow for the removal of 63.5 hectares of land from a protected park if a proposed pipeline project in the Nisga'a Nation's territory goes ahead.

Land from park in Nisga'a territory could be removed for proposed B.C. pipeline

PM Stephen Harper Announces 'Family Tax Cut', Child Care Benefit Boost

PM Stephen Harper Announces 'Family Tax Cut', Child Care Benefit Boost
OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is pressing ahead with income splitting for families with kids under 18 — a multibillion-dollar Conservative election promise from 2011 that critics have said would benefit too few Canadians.

PM Stephen Harper Announces 'Family Tax Cut', Child Care Benefit Boost

B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago

B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The mystery of what happened to a 21-year-old B.C. woman continues to haunt her family more than a year after she disappeared.

B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago