Monday, May 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Man Charged Following Surrey Shooting Investigation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2026 12:04 PM
  • Man Charged Following Surrey Shooting Investigation

A 27-year-old man has been charged following a Surrey Police Service (SPS) investigation into a shooting at a Surrey residence earlier this year.

Police say frontline officers responded to reports of shots fired around 2:52 a.m. on April 13 in the area of 94A Avenue and 127 Street. Investigators confirmed that an occupied home was struck by gunfire, though no injuries were reported.

The Surrey Police Service’s Extortion Response Team (ExRT) later took over the investigation, identifying a suspect vehicle and obtaining a search warrant connected to the case.

With assistance from the Lower Mainland District Emergency Response Team and other SPS units, officers executed the warrant at a Surrey residence, where one man was arrested.

Jaskaran Saroye, 27, has since been charged with discharging a firearm into a place while knowing or being reckless as to whether someone was present. He remains in custody awaiting a bail hearing, with his next court appearance scheduled for May 12, 2026.

“This arrest and charge reflect the determined work of our officers to hold those responsible for gun violence accountable,” said Surrey Police Chief Constable Norm Lipinski in a statement. “Discharging a firearm into an occupied home is an extremely serious offence.”

SPS has also publicly released a photo of Saroye, saying investigators believe the disclosure may assist ongoing investigations into violent extortion-related activity. Police are urging anyone with information about Saroye or related incidents to come forward.

Anyone with information is asked to contact Surrey Police Service at 604-599-0502, the Surrey Extortion Tip Line at 236-485-5149, or anonymously through Crime Stoppers.

Police also noted that the Surrey Extortion Reward Fund, established in September 2025, offers rewards of up to $250,000 for information leading to charges and convictions in extortion-related crimes.

MORE National ARTICLES

Carney says Canadian values key to maintaining sovereignty as authoritarianism rises

Carney says Canadian values key to maintaining sovereignty as authoritarianism rises
Staying true to Canada's core values will be key to maintaining its sovereignty, Prime Minister Mark Carney said Thursday.

Carney says Canadian values key to maintaining sovereignty as authoritarianism rises

Federal government agreed to set aside order to wind down TikTok in Canada

Federal government agreed to set aside order to wind down TikTok in Canada
The federal government agreed to set aside its decision ordering the wind-down of TikTok’s Canadian operations.

Federal government agreed to set aside order to wind down TikTok in Canada

Eby says B.C. will play a key role in new global order described by PM Carney

Eby says B.C. will play a key role in new global order described by PM Carney
Premier David Eby says B.C. will play a "key role" in a new international order charted by Prime Minister Mark Carney in a speech in Davos, Switzerland.

Eby says B.C. will play a key role in new global order described by PM Carney

Carney back home after trips to Davos, China, Qatar, focused on non-U.S. trade

Carney back home after trips to Davos, China, Qatar, focused on non-U.S. trade
Prime Minister Mark Carney has arrived back in Ottawa after a nine-day trip around the world — a tour aimed at drumming up investment abroad that has attracted some cross-partisan criticism.

Carney back home after trips to Davos, China, Qatar, focused on non-U.S. trade

Police investigating first Vancouver homicide of 2026

Police investigating first Vancouver homicide of 2026
Police in Vancouver are investigating the city's first homicide of 2026.

Police investigating first Vancouver homicide of 2026

B.C. anti-extortion chief apologizes for disputing 'crisis' after Eby issues warning

B.C. anti-extortion chief apologizes for disputing 'crisis' after Eby issues warning
The head of British Columbia's anti-extortion task force is apologizing after being told by British Columbia Premier David Eby to step aside unless he demonstrates a "sense of urgency."

B.C. anti-extortion chief apologizes for disputing 'crisis' after Eby issues warning