Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Police Search For Man Who Pushed Victim Into Traffic During Assault

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jul, 2018 11:44 AM
    Vancouver police are appealing for help as they investigate a strange assault where a man was seriously injured when he was pushed into the path of an oncoming vehicle.
     
     
    Police say it happened on East Hastings Street on the night of July 15 after two men stopped to check on the well-being of a woman who appeared intoxicated.
     
     
    The woman assured them she was fine but police say in a news release that the men were confronted moments later by an agitated man who had been walking behind the woman.
     
     
    Police say in a news release the man pushed a 37-year-old Surrey man into the street, where he was hit and seriously injured by a sport utility vehicle.
     
     
    The driver of the vehicle pulled over and other witnesses tried to hold the suspect for police, but both the man and the woman, believed to be his friend, ran off.
     
     
     
     
    Const. Jason Doucette says the victim is still recovering and detectives want to speak to anyone with information about the attack or the suspect, described as in his mid-20s, about 6 feet tall, with a heavy, athletic build.
     
     
    "We have obtained dash-cam video from the SUV involved in the collision," Doucette says in the release.
     
     
    "We are asking the suspect to turn himself in, but if he doesn't, we are confident that someone will come forward to identity him and his friend."
     
     
    A composite drawing issued by investigators shows the suspect has short dark hair, dark facial stubble and police say he was wearing a black crew-neck T-shirt and dark shorts.
     
     
    The woman is described as Asian, 20 to 25 years old, with a slim build, medium length black hair and she was wearing a white tank top or a sun dress. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former B.C. Premier Ujjal Dosanjh Warns Against Change To Proportional Representation

    Dosanjh says Germany, the Netherlands and Hungary require very low percentages of people to vote in candidates with racist views, and that has changed their political landscape in a negative way.

    Former B.C. Premier Ujjal Dosanjh Warns Against Change To Proportional Representation

    5 Things From B.C. Report On Money Laundering

    5 Things From B.C. Report On Money Laundering
    As early as 2012, some employees within both the Gaming Policy Enforcement Branch and the British Columbia Lottery Corp., recognized the reality that small-time loan sharking had evolved into large-scale money laundering.

    5 Things From B.C. Report On Money Laundering

    Military Policeman Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Superior Officer

    Military Policeman Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Superior Officer
    HALIFAX — A Halifax-based military policeman has been found not guilty of sexually assaulting a superior officer during a Royal Canadian Navy exercise in Scotland.

    Military Policeman Acquitted Of Sexually Assaulting Superior Officer

    Canadian Hyperloop Company Says Governments Need To Support Innovation

    A Canadian hyperloop company is threatening to relocate its headquarters to Europe unless it gets political support at home for the implementation of its technology that would transport goods and passengers through tubes at airplane speeds.

    Canadian Hyperloop Company Says Governments Need To Support Innovation

    Union Launches 'I Shop Canada' Campaign To Counter U.S. Trade Moves

    Union Launches 'I Shop Canada' Campaign To Counter U.S. Trade Moves
    Canada's largest private sector union is launching a national social media campaign to urge consumers to support Canadian jobs by buying products and services made in Canada.

    Union Launches 'I Shop Canada' Campaign To Counter U.S. Trade Moves

    Canadians Dodged Paying Feds Up To $3B In Taxes On Foreign Income: CRA

    Canadians Dodged Paying Feds Up To $3B In Taxes On Foreign Income: CRA
    OTTAWA — Canadians dodged paying Ottawa somewhere between $800 million and $3 billion worth of taxes on foreign personal income in 2014, says a new federal estimate released Thursday.

    Canadians Dodged Paying Feds Up To $3B In Taxes On Foreign Income: CRA