Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Four Abbotsford Teens Arrested After Lockdowns At Several Schools

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Dec, 2015 10:25 AM
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — Police in Abbotsford, B.C., are releasing more information about an investigation that prompted brief lockdowns at several Abbotsford schools and a nearly three-hour lockdown at Robert Bateman Secondary.
     
    Const. Ian MacDonald says it began just after 12 p.m. Thursday when four suspects, one possibly carrying a weapon, were involved in a dispute with a homeowner in the northeast corner of the Fraser Valley city.
     
     

    All schools except Bateman released from lockdown. Suspects involved in nearby disturbance have been taken into custody.

    Posted by Abbotsford Police Department on Thursday, 3 December 2015
    The homeowner called police, who worked with school officials to lock down several nearby elementary and middle schools, while the suspects were tracked to Robert Bateman Secondary, about two kilometres away.
     
     
     
    MacDonald says the four 17-year-olds were found inside the high school and arrested without incident, allowing officials to lift the lockdowns at the unrelated schools.
     
    Investigators maintained the lockdown at Robert Bateman Secondary until 3:20 p.m., to allow searches for a possible weapon and additional evidence.
     
     
    MacDonald says an investigation is continuing, but weapons and threats charges being considered against the four, related to the dispute with the homeowner.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Five Things To Know About The Liberal Pledge To Establish New Health Accord

    Five Things To Know About The Liberal Pledge To Establish New Health Accord
    Jane Philpott, Canada's new health minister, says she intends to reach out to the provinces and territories as early as this week to begin the lengthy process of establishing a new federal-provincial health accord.

    Five Things To Know About The Liberal Pledge To Establish New Health Accord

    Abbotsford Death Prompts B.C. To Announce Joint Review Of Children Housed In Hotels

    Abbotsford Death Prompts B.C. To Announce Joint Review Of Children Housed In Hotels
    The review comes after the recent death of 18-year-old Alex Gervais, who was in government care when he fell from the fourth floor of a hotel in Abbotsford.

    Abbotsford Death Prompts B.C. To Announce Joint Review Of Children Housed In Hotels

    Deadline Looms In Class Action Suit On Behalf Of Residential School Day Students

    The Sechelt Indian Band and the Tk'emlups Indian Band launched the day scholars class action suit in 2012, and the February deadline to opt in is approaching. 

    Deadline Looms In Class Action Suit On Behalf Of Residential School Day Students

    Canadian Military Spouses' Pension Problems To Be Reviewed

    Canadian Military Spouses' Pension Problems To Be Reviewed
    OTTAWA — The federal department in charge of retirement benefits has quietly been reviewing its protocols amid concerns that military spouses were wrongfully being rejected for old age security payments.

    Canadian Military Spouses' Pension Problems To Be Reviewed

    Quebec Artist Alfred Pellan Paintings, Replaced With Queen, Return To Government Building In Ottawa

    Quebec Artist Alfred Pellan Paintings, Replaced With Queen, Return To Government Building In Ottawa
    OTTAWA — Two paintings by Quebec artist Alfred Pellan are back on display in the Lester B. Pearson building, four years after the Conservatives removed them to make room for a portrait of the Queen.

    Quebec Artist Alfred Pellan Paintings, Replaced With Queen, Return To Government Building In Ottawa

    Wall Says Trans-Pacific Partnership In Best Interest Of Saskatchewan

    REGINA — Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says he still believes the Trans-Pacific Partnership is a good deal, despite concerns being raised by a prominent businessman.

    Wall Says Trans-Pacific Partnership In Best Interest Of Saskatchewan