Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Dashminder Deol, 37, arrested in connection with manslaughter of Indian student

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Feb, 2015 11:25 AM
    Police in Canada have arrested an Indo-Canadian man on charges of manslaughter in connection with the death of a 19-year-old Indian student, Harmanjit Singh.
     
    Dashminder Deol, 37, has been arrested and charged with manslaughter and offering an indignity to human remains, Canadian CBC reported Thursday.
     
    Singh's decomposed body was found floating on a flood basin in Stoney Creek, a community in the Canadian province of Ontario, in November last year.
     
    Joe Stewart of the homicide unit of Hamilton police did not reveal how Singh died, saying that it would come out in the court system. "But I do not believe there was an intent to kill Singh in this incident," he said. 
     
    On Oct 27, Singh disappeared after spending time at a friend's home on the East Mountain the night before. Police subsequently searched the home as part of the investigation. 
     
    Singh and Deol were "friends for some time". Deol was also known to police prior to this incident, Stewart said, but did not disclose any charges Deol was facing.
     
    Singh was a Mohawk College graduate in Ontario, Canada. His family lives in India, and his father and other family members flew in to locate him after his friends reported him missing late last year.
     
    Family members saw the body after an autopsy, but could not recognise it because of its highly decomposed state.
     
    Photo Credit: CBC (Harmanjit Singh, 19, went missing on Oct 27)
     
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Accused In Polygamy Case Asks For Passport Back To Travel To U.S.

    Accused In Polygamy Case Asks For Passport Back To Travel To U.S.
    CRESTON, B.C. — One of four people accused of polygamy-related charges in British Columbia is asking the court to return her passport so she can travel into the United States.

    Accused In Polygamy Case Asks For Passport Back To Travel To U.S.

    Family, Friends Rally Outside B.C. Court For The Murdered Mother Of Boy

    Family, Friends Rally Outside B.C. Court For The Murdered Mother Of Boy
    RCMP found the body of Roxanne Louie on Jan. 12, about one week after the mother of a three-year-old boy didn't show up for a flight from Penticton, B.C., to Vancouver and was reported missing.

    Family, Friends Rally Outside B.C. Court For The Murdered Mother Of Boy

    Former Vancouver Olympic Boss Seeks To Dismiss Sexual Abuse Lawsuit

    Former Vancouver Olympic Boss Seeks To Dismiss Sexual Abuse Lawsuit
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia Supreme Court judge has reserved a decision on whether to throw out a sexual abuse lawsuit against former Vancouver Olympic CEO John Furlong.

    Former Vancouver Olympic Boss Seeks To Dismiss Sexual Abuse Lawsuit

    Vancouver Design Panel Rejects Controversial 'Origami Tower' On Waterfront

    Vancouver Design Panel Rejects Controversial 'Origami Tower' On Waterfront
    VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver's design panel has rejected a controversial waterfront development dubbed the "origami tower."

    Vancouver Design Panel Rejects Controversial 'Origami Tower' On Waterfront

    B.C. Credit Unions End Merger Talks, Cite Operating Environments And Costs

    B.C. Credit Unions End Merger Talks, Cite Operating Environments And Costs
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Merger talks have ended unsuccessfully for two credit unions in British Columbia. Westminster Savings Credit Union and Prospera Credit Union announced last September that they had entered into negotiations.

    B.C. Credit Unions End Merger Talks, Cite Operating Environments And Costs

    Gandhi-Bot Beer: Consumer Activist Moves Court

    Gandhi-Bot Beer: Consumer Activist Moves Court
    A consumer activist Thursday filed a complaint against America's New England Brewing Company, which sparked a controversy by using a picture of Mahatma Gandhi on its beer cans and selling them in certain parts of India.

    Gandhi-Bot Beer: Consumer Activist Moves Court