Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

No Charges Against Police After Scuffle Broke Suspect's Jaw: B.C. Justice Branch

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Dec, 2015 12:34 PM
    VICTORIA — No charges will be laid against members of a Vancouver Police Department strike force whose arrest of two men left one of the suspects with a broken jaw.
     
    The B.C. Criminal Justice Branch announced Tuesday that the available evidence against the officers doesn't meet its charge-assessment standard for approval.
     
    In September last year, a team watching four people believed to be behind multiple robberies witnessed a jewelry store heist, then tracked the suspects through four Metro Vancouver cities, cornering two men in Port Moody.
     
    A summary of the event said several officers and a police dog moved in to arrest the pair, and in the struggle one suspect received a broken jaw and bite wounds.
     
    The branch says neither the suspect nor other witnesses could explain how the man's jaw was injured or who might be responsible.
     
    B.C.'s police watchdog, the Independent Investigations Office, conducted a review of the incident and then passed its report on to Crown, which determined that it couldn't prove any of the three officers used excessive force.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Coast Guard Base Shuttered By Conservative Government To Re-Open

    Vancouver Coast Guard Base Shuttered By Conservative Government To Re-Open
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver coast guard base shuttered amid controversy by the former Conservative government will be re-opening.

    Vancouver Coast Guard Base Shuttered By Conservative Government To Re-Open

    Vancouver To Host Regular-Season NCAA Basketball Tournaments Beginning In 2017

    Vancouver To Host Regular-Season NCAA Basketball Tournaments Beginning In 2017
    Vancouver will host two regular-season NCAA Division I basketball tournaments beginning in 2017.

    Vancouver To Host Regular-Season NCAA Basketball Tournaments Beginning In 2017

    Justin Trudeau Says He Can't Compel Pope To Apologize For Church's Residential Schools

    Justin Trudeau Says He Can't Compel Pope To Apologize For Church's Residential Schools
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confesses he can't compel an apology from the Pope for the role of the Catholic Church in Canada's residential school system.

    Justin Trudeau Says He Can't Compel Pope To Apologize For Church's Residential Schools

    Latest Plane Load Of Syrians Arrives But How Many More Flights Unclear

    Latest Plane Load Of Syrians Arrives But How Many More Flights Unclear
    OTTAWA — The latest group of Syrians being brought to Canada on a government-sponsored flight have arrived in Toronto.

    Latest Plane Load Of Syrians Arrives But How Many More Flights Unclear

    B.C. Commission Confirms 4.6-Magnitude Quake In August Caused By Fracking

    FORT ST. JOHN, B.C. — The British Columbia Oil and Gas Commission has confirmed that fracking caused a 4.6-magnitude earthquake in August — the largest linked to the industry in the province to date.

    B.C. Commission Confirms 4.6-Magnitude Quake In August Caused By Fracking

    Blue Jays, Federal Election Top Google Canada Searches In 2015

    Blue Jays, Federal Election Top Google Canada Searches In 2015
    TORONTO — The Toronto Blue Jays and the federal election that saw Justin Trudeau become prime minister were the top Canadian subjects of Google searches in 2015.

    Blue Jays, Federal Election Top Google Canada Searches In 2015