Monday, December 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man charged with second-degree murder in Vancouver double homicide: police

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2025 08:53 AM
  • Man charged with second-degree murder in Vancouver double homicide: police

A 54-year-old Vancouver man has been charged with two counts of second-degree murder and one count of aggravated assault after two women were found dead in Vancouver on Friday.

The Vancouver Police say the B.C. Prosecution Service approved the charges against Viet Quy John Ly.

Police responded to reports of a stabbing in the city's Joyce-Collingwood neighbourhood on Friday afternoon and found a 50-year-old woman with life-threatening injuries inside an apartment building.

Later police say they found two female homicide victims in another building nearby.

Investigators say they believe the stabbing and the homicides are connected.

At the time police said that a suspect was found with non-life-threatening injuries at the scene of the homicides and was arrested.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario First Nation asks for halt to Ring of Fire mining development

Ontario First Nation asks for halt to Ring of Fire mining development
Marten Falls First Nation, located about 400 kilometres northeast of Thunder Bay, has filed a statement of claim asking for interim and permanent injunctions preventing Ontario and Canada from funding or participating in mining-related activities in the Ring of Fire.

Ontario First Nation asks for halt to Ring of Fire mining development

Climate change major driver of surging algae levels in Canada's lakes: study

Climate change major driver of surging algae levels in Canada's lakes: study
Average algae levels have spiked seven-fold since around the 1960s compared to the previous century, according to a study of 80 lakes across Canada. 

Climate change major driver of surging algae levels in Canada's lakes: study

Family 'heartbroken' after B.C. mother and baby killed by falling tree

Family 'heartbroken' after B.C. mother and baby killed by falling tree
In a statement provided through the Comox Valley RCMP, the family thanks emergency responders and others on the beach at Cumberland Lake Park Campground who tried to save the pair on July 31.

Family 'heartbroken' after B.C. mother and baby killed by falling tree

Carney calls on Métis groups to help change Canada's 'economic trajectory'

Carney calls on Métis groups to help change Canada's 'economic trajectory'
"We have the opportunity to work together on transformative projects that can help change the economic trajectory of our country to the benefit of all," Carney said to Métis leaders from Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan and the N.W.T. who gathered in Ottawa for the meeting.

Carney calls on Métis groups to help change Canada's 'economic trajectory'

Two climbers, one of them injured, plucked off sheer mountain face in B.C.

Two climbers, one of them injured, plucked off sheer mountain face in B.C.
North Shore Search and Rescue says in a social media statement that they went in late Tuesday, but weather was rapidly deteriorating and the climbers were hanging mid-face on the 2,100-metre peak. 

Two climbers, one of them injured, plucked off sheer mountain face in B.C.

First Nation disappointed as B.C. court rejects challenge to Mount Polley dam level

First Nation disappointed as B.C. court rejects challenge to Mount Polley dam level
The Xatsull First Nation claimed the province's approval of the plan to raise the level of the dam in B.C.'s Interior by four metres was improper and done without "meaningful" consultation with the nation. 

First Nation disappointed as B.C. court rejects challenge to Mount Polley dam level