Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver police say they shot suspect who stabbed a 'number' of people

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Dec, 2024 01:50 PM
  • Vancouver police say they shot suspect who stabbed a 'number' of people

Witnesses have described a chaotic scene leading up to what officers say were multiple stabbings in downtown Vancouver, before police shot the suspect in a convenience store.

The witnesses say a man stole liquor and a knife from a restaurant then used the weapon across the street to stab people in a 7-Eleven store. 

“One of the kitchen guys came out, asked if he could help him, and the guy grabbed the knife and asked him if he wanted to die,” said Kylie Noel, who was working at the Original Joe’s restaurant at Robson and Hamilton streets on Wednesday. 

Her co-worker then told her to call police.

Video later captured by Mainul Islam, a student and part-time food delivery worker, shows police pointing their guns over the counter of the 7-Eleven, shouting at someone to "move over," then firing at least 10 times.

Islam said he had been picking up a food order when he saw a "homeless guy" trying to steal cigarettes behind the counter. He said staff were trying to stop the man. 

"And he just brought out his knife from his pocket, and he tried to stab … the guy, but he ran away, and then he went to stab that lady. Maybe he already stabbed that lady in the back, I saw blood, but she was OK."

He said the police were there within minutes and "just shot this guy." 

Neither Vancouver police nor BC Emergency Health Services responded to requests for information about the condition of the suspect, who police say stabbed "a number of people." Police have not released details about their conditions either.

Another video shows two people being wheeled away on stretchers, with a firefighter performing chest compressions on one of them.

Noel said that before the shooting, a man came into Original Joe's and stood by the restaurant's door, opened a laptop computer and “demanded a glass of water.”

Noel said she refused, and went back to tell kitchen staff that the man was refusing to leave.

She said he had left by the time other workers came out, but Noel then saw him outside with a bottle of alcohol she believed was stolen from the restaurant, which she later confirmed by watching security camera footage. 

When Noel returned to the restaurant's main floor, the man was again behind the bar, and Noel ran back down to tell her colleagues in the kitchen. She said that was when the man grabbed the knife and threatened Noel's co-worker. 

Noel said she ran into a neighbouring hotel lobby and stayed on the phone with police as she described the man. 

She said she watched him walk into the 7-Eleven across the street. “Maybe three minutes later the police showed up,” she said. 

In Islam's video of the shooting, a stun gun held by an officer appears to have already been fired, with the wires trailing over the counter inside the convenience store.

"Move over, right now. Move over," one officer shouts at the unseen suspect before gunfire is heard.

After the shooting, a man can be heard saying "Are you OK ma'am?" while a woman sobs.

Andrew Cecil works at the Rosedale Hotel near the shooting scene and said he walked over to the 7-Eleven after the man had left Original Joe's.

“I saw him with his knife,” Cecil said.

Cecil said the man went behind the counter and cornered an employee. A manager tried to “cool it” down while the man was swinging the knife around, Cecil said. 

He said police showed up shortly after and deployed a Taser, which “didn't seem to affect him,” before the shots were fired. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver begins process of closing homeless encampment at Crab Park

Vancouver begins process of closing homeless encampment at Crab Park
Vancouver's park board says it has begun the process of closing the homeless encampment that has been in place at a local park since 2021. The park board says it is talking directly with each of the seven people still in the camp located in the designated area at Crab Park, with the goal of closing the encampment and returning the area to "general park use" by Nov. 7.

Vancouver begins process of closing homeless encampment at Crab Park

What you need to know as Trudeau fights to retain leadership of the Liberal party

What you need to know as Trudeau fights to retain leadership of the Liberal party
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has resisted calls for his resignation for more than a year now but in recent weeks those calls have grown louder and in some cases more public. The Liberal caucus met Wednesday, where MPs had a three-hour long discussion about their party's current state and whether Trudeau is the best one to keep leading it.

What you need to know as Trudeau fights to retain leadership of the Liberal party

Poll suggests more than half of Canadians unaware of gridlock in House of Commons

Poll suggests more than half of Canadians unaware of gridlock in House of Commons
A debate has ground work in the House of Commons to a halt for weeks, but a new poll suggests that most Canadians are not even aware it's happening.  In a new survey from polling firm Leger, 55 per cent of respondents said they had not heard about the procedural issues that have gridlocked Parliament for more than 12 sitting days. 

Poll suggests more than half of Canadians unaware of gridlock in House of Commons

Oil removal work begins on 'fragile' Second World War-era wreck in coastal B.C.

Oil removal work begins on 'fragile' Second World War-era wreck in coastal B.C.
The Canadian Coast Guard said the 77-metre-long Brigadier General M.G. Zalinski has been burping up "slow but consistent drops of oil" since the fall of 2022 at the shipwreck site in Grenville Channel, part of the Inside Passage off northern B.C. 

Oil removal work begins on 'fragile' Second World War-era wreck in coastal B.C.

B.C. Green leader spoke with NDP's Eby, but didn't pick up when Conservatives called

B.C. Green leader spoke with NDP's Eby, but didn't pick up when Conservatives called
Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau says the starting place to supporting whichever party comes to power in British Columbia is her party's platform.  Furstenau says she has taken a call from NDP Leader David Eby, but didn't answer the phone when B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad called, adding she didn't recognize the number. 

B.C. Green leader spoke with NDP's Eby, but didn't pick up when Conservatives called

Witness told rescuers missing B.C. man swept down the rain-swollen Coquitlam River

Witness told rescuers missing B.C. man swept down the rain-swollen Coquitlam River
A witness reported seeing a man who's been missing since Sunday fall into the swollen Coquitlam River as he tried to rescue a dog, and was "immediately swept away," a local search and rescue manager said on Wednesday.  Ian MacDonald said Coquitlam Search and Rescue received the report about 59-year-old Robert Belding on Tuesday.

Witness told rescuers missing B.C. man swept down the rain-swollen Coquitlam River