Monday, June 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

Additional charges laid after Masonic hall fires

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Apr, 2021 11:58 PM
  • Additional charges laid after Masonic hall fires

Police say five more charges have been approved against a man accused of setting fire to three Masonic halls in Metro Vancouver last week.

Police say 42-year-old Benjamin Kohlman was charged Tuesday with two counts of arson and three counts of break and enter to commit arson after fires in Vancouver and North Vancouver.

Police arrested Kohlman in nearby Burnaby within a few hours of the fires.

He was charged the following day with one count of arson in relation to the fire in Vancouver, as well as one count of assaulting a police officer.

All three fires were allegedly set in the span of an hour last Tuesday.

The first call came in at around 6:45 a.m. about a fire at the Lynn Valley Lodge in North Vancouver, while a second fire reported minutes later severely damaged a Masonic centre located four kilometres away.

Fire officials said the third fire at a Masonic hall in east Vancouver was reported around 7:30 a.m. and caused little damage.

MORE National ARTICLES

Anxious Canadians Await Federal Covid-19 Help As Quarantine Rules Tighten

Provinces reported hundreds of new cases on Wednesday, with 30 dead nationally. Quebec alone had 326 new cases and two more deaths, while Ontario reported 100 more cases — its largest single day jump.

Anxious Canadians Await Federal Covid-19 Help As Quarantine Rules Tighten

Hockey Gear Manufacturer To Switch From Protecting Players To Medical Staff

Hockey Gear Manufacturer To Switch From Protecting Players To Medical Staff
MONTREAL - Canadian hockey equipment manufacturer Bauer is offering to modify its production line to make protective visors for doctors, nurses and first responders.

Hockey Gear Manufacturer To Switch From Protecting Players To Medical Staff

Help Is On The Way: Trudeau's Emergency Benefit To Provide $2000 A Month For 4 Months To Help Workers Affected By COVID-19

The CERB would be a simpler and more accessible combination of the previously announced Emergency Care Benefit and Emergency Support Benefit.

Help Is On The Way: Trudeau's Emergency Benefit To Provide $2000 A Month For 4 Months To Help Workers Affected By COVID-19

First Nations Health Authority Tailoring Its Messaging About COVID-19

First Nations Health Authority Tailoring Its Messaging About COVID-19
VANCOUVER - The public health communication about COVID-19 that's aimed at Indigenous communities should be tailored and take into account Indigenous experiences, say a health official and a researcher who work with First Nation and Metis communities.

First Nations Health Authority Tailoring Its Messaging About COVID-19

Math Modellers Say Lack Of Data Makes Curve Flattening Difficult To Predict

VANCOUVER - When Caroline Colijn sees the daily numbers of new cases of COVID-19 in Canada, she looks for certain things.    

Math Modellers Say Lack Of Data Makes Curve Flattening Difficult To Predict

Nova Scotia Auditor General Appointed To Same Post In British Columbia

Nova Scotia Auditor General Appointed To Same Post In British Columbia
VICTORIA - An all-party committee of the B.C. legislature is recommending that Nova Scotia's auditor general be appointed to the same position in the Western province.

Nova Scotia Auditor General Appointed To Same Post In British Columbia