Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

White Rock stabbing suspect arrested

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 May, 2024 09:45 AM
  • White Rock stabbing suspect arrested

A man from Surrey, B-C, has been charged with aggravated assault in relation to one of two recent stabbings in the community of White Rock.

A statement from the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 27-year-old Dimitri Nelson Hyacinth has been charged over the alleged assault of a 28-year man, Jatinder Singh, along the White Rock pier and promenade on April 21st.

Two days later, 26-year-old Kulwinder Singh Sohi was fatally stabbed in the same area, though R-C-M-P did not provide an update on any further charges.

Police say the man killed in a fatal stabbing attack in White Rock, last week may have tried to chase down the suspect who stabbed him.

Homicide investigators say witnesses told them that Kulwinder Singh Sohi, 26, was seen in a physical altercation with the suspect before giving chase on the White Rock Promenade on Tuesday evening.

"The original attack occurred about 75 metres west down the pathway," said Integrated Homicide Investigation Team spokesman Sgt. Timothy Pierotti at a news conference on White Rock's waterfront.

"What started with an attack led to a foot pursuit involving the suspect and the victim. It ended up coming towards (the conference site), and that's where the victim sadly collapsed and succumbed to his injuries."

Police said Sohi was attended to by emergency responders after the attack but died at the scene.

The stabbing death has shocked the White Rock community since another stabbing attack happened nearby just days earlier, when a man was injured but survived Sunday evening.

The description of the suspect in the fatal stabbing Tuesday, a Black man wearing a hat and a grey hoodie, is similar to the one from Sunday's attack, but police have not confirmed if the incidents are linked.

Pierotti said investigators are not "jumping to conclusions" that the attacks were perpetrated by the same suspect, but more video and witness accounts will help police positively identify the perpetrator in both cases.

"Just to be clear, we're talking about two different situations that occurred here," Pierotti said. "And to draw links between them … there's obviously similarities between them, but we can't confirm at this time that it is the same person responsible for both situations."

White Rock Mayor Megan Knight had said that she was "completely shocked" to hear about the stabbings, calling the attacks "terrifying."

Some reports have noted that the victims of both attacks were South Asian males, but Pierotti said the police cannot "rule that out or confirm that."

He also said White Rock RCMP has stepped up patrols and police presence in the waterfront area, and the pubic should remain confident in their safety when visiting.

"As somebody who lived five minutes away from here for a number of years and who still regularly comes here with his family, this is a safe community," Pierotti said.

"This is a terrible thing that happened, and I can appreciate how it could shake the community. White Rock is not used to having incidents like this occur, but that just speaks to the safety of White Rock."

Police said a review of video evidence showed "many witnesses in the area" when the fatal stabbing took place, and anyone who saw the attack should contact police immediately.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. makes it easier to salvage timber damaged by wildfires

B.C. makes it easier to salvage timber damaged by wildfires
The B.C. government says it's making it easier for forestry companies to salvage timber damaged by wildfires. Sustainable Forestry Innovation Minister Andrew Mercier says in a statement that changes to the price of fees for harvesting timber on Crown land make salvage "more economic," and will speed up forest regeneration.

B.C. makes it easier to salvage timber damaged by wildfires

B.C. moves alone on Surrey Police Service after mayor, council refuse to leave RCMP

B.C. moves alone on Surrey Police Service after mayor, council refuse to leave RCMP
British Columbia is moving ahead with the transition to an independent police service in Surrey after the mayor and council refused to part ways with the RCMP.  Solicitor General Mike Farnworth says a plan is in place for the continued transition to the independent Surrey Police Service, and he'll release more details next week on how that will work. 

B.C. moves alone on Surrey Police Service after mayor, council refuse to leave RCMP

B.C.'s government buys land for transit-oriented housing development

B.C.'s government buys land for transit-oriented housing development
British Columbia's government is spearheading a new public development project on Vancouver Island aimed at bringing more affordable homes closer to transit access Premier David Eby says the province has purchased two parcels of land for the Uptown development in Saanich, B.C., through the $394-million property acquisition fund operated by the Transportation Ministry. 

B.C.'s government buys land for transit-oriented housing development

Woman arrested for attacking 'random strangers' in Vancouver, police say

Woman arrested for attacking 'random strangers' in Vancouver, police say
A woman has been arrested over what Vancouver police say is a series of assaults against "random strangers" in the city.  Police say officers responded to multiple calls on Sunday in the city's downtown core where the 32-year-old woman is alleged to have assaulted three people. 

Woman arrested for attacking 'random strangers' in Vancouver, police say

B.C. under fire after accounting firm accused of conflict in running grant

B.C. under fire after accounting firm accused of conflict in running grant
British Columbia Premier David Eby says the government has asked the auditor general to review the province's grant programs after allegations of conflict-of-interest from a clean-technology company. The development comes after Merritt, B.C.-based electric-hybrid truck maker Edison Motors said in a TikTok video that accounting firm MNP was both administering a CleanBC grant and offering to provide services to aid businesses in applications. 

B.C. under fire after accounting firm accused of conflict in running grant

Crown blames most of Ali murder trial delays on defence and 'extraordinary events'

Crown blames most of Ali murder trial delays on defence and 'extraordinary events'
A Crown lawyer says holdups to the trial of a man found guilty of murdering a 13-year-old Burnaby, B.C., girl were mostly attributable to the defence and "discrete exceptional events," as he argued against the case being thrown out over delays.  Daniel Porte told a B.C. Supreme Court judge that if those events were subtracted, the remaining delays to Ibrahim Ali's trial would have amounted to about 25 months, falling within the allowable threshold.

Crown blames most of Ali murder trial delays on defence and 'extraordinary events'