Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man arrested in connection to fatal fire that left three dead in Halifax

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2015 10:33 AM

    HALIFAX — Police have taken a 30-year-old man into custody for questioning after firefighters recovered the bodies of three people from a burned out home in Halifax.

    Cpl. Greg Church said the third body was removed from the home Thursday, a day after two people were discovered in the burning wreckage on Old Guysborough Road.

    Church said he could not release any details on the suspect or the victims as the investigation is in its early stages.

    Earlier, the RCMP said a man was taken into custody at about 12:45 a.m. Thursday after someone rammed two police vehicles with a car in the Milford area, about a half-hour drive from the scene of the blaze.

    "The individual that was involved in the collision with the police cars in the Milford area last evening is a suspect in the house fire," he said.

    The fire broke out Wednesday around 4:30 p.m. The home is in a rural, wooded area about 25 kilometres northeast of Halifax's airport.

    Church said the bodies will undergo autopsies to determine the causes of death.

    Deputy fire Chief Roy Hollett said crews had to wait before entering the building to find a third person who was unaccounted for because the first and second floors of the home collapsed.

    A spokesman for the Halifax Regional Municipality said one problem in fighting the fire was a metal roof that kept the interior of the house extremely hot.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault

    SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault
    VANCOUVER — SkyTrain service has been halted between two busy stations in the Metro Vancouver area after what transit officials believe is an electrical fault.

    SkyTrain service in Metro Vancouver area halted by electrical fault

    B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand

    B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand
    VANCOUVER — Poultry producers are assuring B.C. residents there will be plenty of turkeys on store shelves during the holidays despite an avian flu outbreak that has killed thousands of animals.

    B.C. poultry supply unaffected by avian flu; turkeys brought in to meet demand

    Oilsands leak that fouled aquifer is close to site where oil bubbled to surface

    Oilsands leak that fouled aquifer is close to site where oil bubbled to surface
    EDMONTON — A Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. oilsands operation that has contaminated a groundwater aquifer is renewing questions about a technology that has already been linked to another serious leak in northern Alberta.

    Oilsands leak that fouled aquifer is close to site where oil bubbled to surface

    Judge at Magnotta trial says Twitter account in his name isn't his

    Judge at Magnotta trial says Twitter account in his name isn't his
    MONTREAL — The judge in Luka Rocco Magnotta's first-degree murder trial says he is "flabbergasted" and "not amused" about what he calls a fake Twitter account bearing his name.

    Judge at Magnotta trial says Twitter account in his name isn't his

    Rainfall Warning In Metro Vancouver Leads BC Ferries To Cancel Some Sailings

    Rainfall Warning In Metro Vancouver Leads BC Ferries To Cancel Some Sailings
    Environment Canada issued a rainfall warning for Metro Vancouver with some 50 millimetres expected to drench the region on Saturday.

    Rainfall Warning In Metro Vancouver Leads BC Ferries To Cancel Some Sailings

    B.C. Education Support Staff Ratify Agreements Negotiated With Province

    B.C. Education Support Staff Ratify Agreements Negotiated With Province
    The province says the remaining seven districts and unions representing some 3,500 workers have recently signed on to their agreements.

    B.C. Education Support Staff Ratify Agreements Negotiated With Province