Monday, May 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Family, police dispute imitation firearm in altercation death in Saskatoon hospital

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2026 11:20 AM
  • Family, police dispute imitation firearm in altercation death in Saskatoon hospital

The family of a man who died in an altercation with hospital security in Saskatoon are disputing whether an imitation firearm was in the room. 

Saskatoon police say drugs and an imitation weapon were found in the hospital room where 36-year-old Trevor Dubois died Friday.

His niece Jayden Dubois, and his mother Val Dubois, told a news conference Monday the firearm was a cigarette holder and lighter in pink and yellow colours.

Val Dubois said the revelation from police hits like "a dagger" and says she wants answers on what happened.

"Trevor would never hurt anybody," she said. "I just want answers. How did this happen?"

Police say the security officers entered the room last week at Royal University Hospital on reports a firearm was seen inside.

They say there was an altercation when security attempted to restrain the man, and he became unresponsive and died. 

They say along with the imitation gun, methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia were found in the room. 

Dubois was a First Nations member. Mark Arcand, the Tribal Chief of the Saskatoon Tribal Council, urged people not to speculate on what happened, but said Trevor "was assaulted and there was a major crime committed that took his life."

Trevor Dubois' brother, Ryan, also urged people to not to jump to conclusions, saying, "Let them do the investigation."

But he questioned the training done for hospital security staff to de-escalate difficult situations.

"No security should have the right to kill or murder anyone," he said.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Heywood Yu

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Post union launches strike as Ottawa moves to end most door-to-door mail

Canada Post union launches strike as Ottawa moves to end most door-to-door mail
Canada Post spokeswoman Lisa Liu said in a statement that no new mail will be accepted during the labour disruption.

Canada Post union launches strike as Ottawa moves to end most door-to-door mail

Port of Vancouver says record volumes of cargo moved during first half of 2025

Port of Vancouver says record volumes of cargo moved during first half of 2025
Canola oil exports moving through the port were up 72 per cent to 700,000 metric tonnes as cargoes were able to move to markets other than China and the United States. 

Port of Vancouver says record volumes of cargo moved during first half of 2025

Carney looks to strengthen trade, security ties in U.K. visit

Carney looks to strengthen trade, security ties in U.K. visit
Carney had been scheduled to meet with the Danish prime minister, but that meeting was cancelled. 

Carney looks to strengthen trade, security ties in U.K. visit

Five things to know about Canada Post's future after Ottawa announces reforms

Five things to know about Canada Post's future after Ottawa announces reforms
In the second quarter of this year, Canada Post recorded a loss before tax of $407 million — the Crown corporation's largest loss before tax in a single quarter. Canada Post reported a profit of $46 million in the same period a year earlier.

Five things to know about Canada Post's future after Ottawa announces reforms

Economic growth in July could give way to stall in August: StatCan

Economic growth in July could give way to stall in August: StatCan
Real gross domestic product grew 0.2 per cent in July, marking the first signs of growth in four months. Real GDP declined 1.6 per cent on an annualized basis in the second quarter.

Economic growth in July could give way to stall in August: StatCan

Statistics Canada says tourism spending up 0.9 per cent in second quarter at $26.5B

Statistics Canada says tourism spending up 0.9 per cent in second quarter at $26.5B
Statistics Canada says overnight travel to Canada by international visitors dropped 6.9 per cent in the second quarter, while overnight travel from the U.S. fell 10.2 per cent.

Statistics Canada says tourism spending up 0.9 per cent in second quarter at $26.5B