Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Whistler Stabbing: Violent Long Weekend Claims Burnaby Teenager Luka Gordic's Life

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 May, 2015 10:00 AM
    WHISTLER, B.C. — The brother of a young man fatally stabbed while celebrating May long weekend in Whistler, B.C., is demanding that the mountain resort municipality take action to stem what he sees as a rising problem of unchecked violence.
     
    Luka Gordic, 19, of Burnaby, B.C., died after being stabbed near Main Street early Sunday morning, confirmed his older brother Milos.
     
    RCMP have not released the man's identity but they say he was taken to a nearby clinic with serious injuries, where he later died.
     
    Several suspects were taken into custody in relation to the death, said police.
     
    The Mounties are also investigating a separate stabbing that took place fewer than 24 hours later, shortly before midnight on Sunday. The second incident also involved a 19-year-old victim.
     
    The man was taken to hospital in Vancouver to be treated for multiple stab wounds but he is expected to recover, said police.
     
     
    "This has been beyond devastating," Milos said on Monday, describing his younger brother as his best friend.
     
    "People are going to think this is a gang-on-gang thing but it's not like that," he said. "He was an innocent little man."
     
    Luka, who turned 19 earlier this month, graduated from Burnaby Central Secondary School a year ago and was studying to become a plumber.
     
    He was the youngest of four kids and lived at home with his parents, two older brothers, one sister and the family dog.
     
    The province's coroners service and the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team are responding to the incident.
     
    "Something's got to be done," said Milos, describing his family as both devastated and furious.
     
     
    "You've got innocent kids getting stabbed," he said. "It shouldn't happen to anyone."
     
    As for those responsible for the stabbing, Milos said he expects them to be punished by the law.
     
    "They hurt a lot of people, those guys," he said. "I hope they know what they did."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    More Kids, Youth Visiting Hospital ERs For Mental Health Issues: Report

    More Kids, Youth Visiting Hospital ERs For Mental Health Issues: Report
    TORONTO — A new study shows a growing number of Canadian children and youth are seeking help for mental health disorders at hospital emergency rooms and more are being admitted for in-patient treatment.

    More Kids, Youth Visiting Hospital ERs For Mental Health Issues: Report

    Rachel Notley Getting Used To Being Called Premier; First Caucus Meeting Saturday

    Rachel Notley Getting Used To Being Called Premier; First Caucus Meeting Saturday
    EDMONTON — Alberta's Rachel Notley says she's starting to get used to people calling her premier and she plans to hold her first caucus meeting on Saturday.

    Rachel Notley Getting Used To Being Called Premier; First Caucus Meeting Saturday

    Man Arrested In Nanaimo Days After Police Uncover Remains In Alberta

    Man Arrested In Nanaimo Days After Police Uncover Remains In Alberta
    Police say 30-year-old Tommy Paul was spotted by plainclothes officers on Wednesday while he was riding a bike.

    Man Arrested In Nanaimo Days After Police Uncover Remains In Alberta

    Omar Khadr To Be Free On Bail After Almost 13 Years In Prison For War Crimes

    Omar Khadr To Be Free On Bail After Almost 13 Years In Prison For War Crimes
    EDMONTON — Omar Khadr is expected to be released from prison soon after an Alberta Court of Appeal justice rejected a last-ditch government attempt to keep the Guantanamo Bay prisoner behind bars.

    Omar Khadr To Be Free On Bail After Almost 13 Years In Prison For War Crimes

    Police Should Have Said Halifax Man In Chemicals Case Couldn't Make Bomb: Lawyer

    Police Should Have Said Halifax Man In Chemicals Case Couldn't Make Bomb: Lawyer
    HALIFAX — Police should have informed the public they knew a stockpile of chemicals that led to evacuations in two cities lacked key bomb ingredients, says a defence lawyer representing the man who was arrested in the high-profile case.

    Police Should Have Said Halifax Man In Chemicals Case Couldn't Make Bomb: Lawyer

    Burying Nuclear Waste Near Lake Huron Safest Option, Panel Concludes

    Burying Nuclear Waste Near Lake Huron Safest Option, Panel Concludes
    A Canadian environmental assessment concludes burying hazardous nuclear material near the shore of Lake Huron in a deep underground bunker is the best way to deal with the waste.

    Burying Nuclear Waste Near Lake Huron Safest Option, Panel Concludes