Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two Vancouver Police Officers Won't Face Charges For Civilian Death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Feb, 2017 12:37 PM
    VICTORIA — Two Vancouver police officers will not be facing charges related to the shooting death of a man who had a history of mental illness, British Columbia's Criminal Justice Branch said Thursday.
     
    It's a decision that disappoints the legal advocacy group Pivot Legal Society, which said officers acted too quickly when they shot Tony Du three times.
     
    The officers had responded to reports of a distraught 51-year-old man swinging a two-by-four at an intersection in the city's east end on Nov. 22, 2014.
     
    A report from the justice branch said the man pointed the two-by-four at the officers in a threatening manner and did not comply with their orders to drop it, leading one officer to discharge a beanbag weapon.
     
    When the less lethal option failed to stop the suspect, the branch said the second officer shot the man, who was taken to hospital but died during in surgery.
     
    The entire altercation, from when police first arrived at the scene to when an ambulance was requested, happened within a minute and 14 seconds.
     
    The branch said the man had been diagnosed with schizophrenia and had previously suffered from hallucinations, but did not have a history of being violent.
     
    A branch statement said evidence collected by the Independent Investigation Office showed that officers acted reasonably and charges related to murder, manslaughter or use of force would not likely result in a conviction.
     
    Douglas King, a lawyer with Pivot Legal Society, announced plans for a civil lawsuit on behalf of the family, saying the investigation leaves them with many questions about why officers used deadly force so quickly.
     
    "In our opinion there is so much more that could have been done before using lethal force against Mr. Du," King said at a news conference.
     
    The legal group has identified what it sees as a number of flaws in the investigation, saying reports do not include a photo or detailed description of the wooden board Du was carrying or an explanation on to what degree it could be considered a weapon.
     
    The group said an explanation on what type of de-escalation training the officers received and whether that was followed is also missing from the report.
     
    King also raised concerns about the investigation's use of a retired Vancouver police sergeant as an expert on police use of force, saying such experts tend to side with police.
     
    He suggested it also undermines the independence of the investigation.
     
    King said investigators and the Crown have left the man's family feeling "absolutely distraught" and "intensely disappointed."
     
    "They leave it to the family to seek justice themselves," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Imam Counts Accused As One Of The Victims Of Quebec City Mosque Attack

    Imam Counts Accused As One Of The Victims Of Quebec City Mosque Attack
    Imam Hussein Guillet says someone planted ideas in Alexandre Bissonnette's head.

    Imam Counts Accused As One Of The Victims Of Quebec City Mosque Attack

    Same Plane, Different Day: Smoke Causes WestJet Plane To Return To Calgary

     A WestJet plane flying to Toronto has had to make an emergency landing in Calgary due to smoke inside the cabin. It was the same plane that made an emergency landing in Calgary 24 hours earlier due to the same problem.

    Same Plane, Different Day: Smoke Causes WestJet Plane To Return To Calgary

    Prime Minister Calls Halifax Imam At Home To Offer Condolences, Comfort

    Prime Minister Calls Halifax Imam At Home To Offer Condolences, Comfort
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia imam says his fears of more violence against mosques were eased this week by a direct call to his home from the prime minister.

    Prime Minister Calls Halifax Imam At Home To Offer Condolences, Comfort

    Montreal Police Say Local Mosque Has Window Smashed And Eggs Thrown At It

    Montreal Police Say Local Mosque Has Window Smashed And Eggs Thrown At It
    Montreal police say a local mosque has been the target of vandalism.

    Montreal Police Say Local Mosque Has Window Smashed And Eggs Thrown At It

    Canadian Women Charged In Australia In Luxury Cruise Cocaine Bust See Cases Put Off

    Canadian Women Charged In Australia In Luxury Cruise Cocaine Bust See Cases Put Off
    Three Quebecers charged with importing cocaine into Australia aboard a luxury cruise ship have seen their cases put off until later this year. 

    Canadian Women Charged In Australia In Luxury Cruise Cocaine Bust See Cases Put Off

    Former ICBC Employee Charged For Accessing Names In Justice Institute Attacks

    Former ICBC Employee Charged For Accessing Names In Justice Institute Attacks
    A former employee of the Insurance Corp. of British Columbia has been charged after a string of violent attacks on people associated with a justice training centre in New Westminster, B.C.

    Former ICBC Employee Charged For Accessing Names In Justice Institute Attacks