Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

New information links homicide of Dhindsa brothers to multiple Lower Mainland shootings

Darpan News Desk IHIT, 25 Oct, 2022 12:18 PM
  • New information links homicide of Dhindsa brothers to multiple Lower Mainland shootings

The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) has identified new information that is believed to be linked to the homicides of brothers Chaten and Joban Dhindsa with a series of Lower Mainland shootings.

Background: On March 19, 2021, Richmond RCMP officers responded to the 22000-block of Rathburn Drive to assist with a structure fire. Once the fire was extinguished, two deceased individuals were located inside the residence. The deceased were identified as brothers, Chaten Dhindsa, 25 and Joban Dhindsa, 23, both of Richmond. The injuries sustained by the Dhindsa brothers were consistent with a homicide. 

On October 25, 2022, IHIT investigators revealed that information has now linked the homicides of the Dhindsa brothers to a series of shootings throughout the Lower Mainland that lead up to the homicides. 

On December 3, 2020, an incident in the 4500-block of No. 3 Road in Richmond, BC, in which three suspect vehicles, a black Volkswagen Jetta, a silver Audi and a black Range Rover, were identified following a shots-fired call in the area, is said to have been a precursor to the homicide.

“These are complex investigations that go far beyond a single shooting,” says Sergeant Timothy Pierotti of IHIT. “I commend the investigative team and forensic experts that continue to work relentlessly as information continues to come in.”

IHIT is asking that anyone with information regarding the homicides of Chaten and Joban Dhindsa or the shooting on December 3, 2020 in Richmond, or any events that lead to their deaths, to contact IHIT. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Interim handgun import ban kicks in today

Interim handgun import ban kicks in today
The measure is part of a broader firearms-control package that would allow for the automatic removal of gun licences from people committing domestic violence or engaged in criminal harassment, such as stalking, as well as increase maximum penalties for gun smuggling and trafficking to 14 years from 10.

Interim handgun import ban kicks in today

Pfizer booster approved for kids five to 11

Pfizer booster approved for kids five to 11
Health Canada has authorized a booster dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for children between five and 11 years old, chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam said Friday. Tam said the National Advisory Committee on Immunization recommends children with underlying health conditions should be offered a booster no earlier than six months after their second dose.

Pfizer booster approved for kids five to 11

B.C. to ration liquor sales, says ABLE BC

B.C. to ration liquor sales, says ABLE BC
The executive director of the Alliance of Beverage Licensees says the limits at BC Liquor Stores took effect at 9 a.m. and will ration the quantity of alcohol that customers, including pubs, bars, restaurants, and the public, may purchase in a single transaction.  

B.C. to ration liquor sales, says ABLE BC

One wolf dead, one missing in B.C. zoo escape

One wolf dead, one missing in B.C. zoo escape
The zoo in Aldergrove, B.C., has been shut for three days as workers and conservation officers searched for the wolves, while Langley RCMP investigate the incident as a suspected case of unlawful entry and vandalism.

One wolf dead, one missing in B.C. zoo escape

B.C. Liberals boot MLA after 'Celebrate CO2' tweet

B.C. Liberals boot MLA after 'Celebrate CO2' tweet
Party leader Kevin Falcon says in a statement that Rustad, who represents Nechako Lakes in central B.C., has been removed for what he says is a "pattern of behaviour" that isn't supportive of the caucus.

B.C. Liberals boot MLA after 'Celebrate CO2' tweet

UBC researchers find 'weak spot' in COVID-19 virus

UBC researchers find 'weak spot' in COVID-19 virus
Researchers say exploiting that weakness could pave the way for new treatments that would be effective against all strains of the illness that has killed almost 6.5-million people across the globe since it was identified more than two years ago.

UBC researchers find 'weak spot' in COVID-19 virus