Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

No charges for Vancouver officer involved in fatal 2022 shooting: prosecutors

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2025 12:17 PM
  • No charges for Vancouver officer involved in fatal 2022 shooting: prosecutors

A Vancouver Police officer will not be charged over a fatal shooting in a city rooming house in May 2022. 

The British Columbia Prosecution Service says in a statement the shooting happened at the Patricia Hotel in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside shortly after staff called 911 to report a resident assaulting others with a stick.

The service says the man appeared to be experiencing drug or mental health issues and he later produced a knife, information that was relayed to the three officers who then found the man in a hallway holding the weapon.

The service says one of the officers raised a beanbag weapon and told the man to drop the knife, but he did not comply, prompting police to shoot three beanbag rounds before another fired three rounds with their firearm.

It says the man fell to the floor after being shot and officers handcuffed him and provided first aid, but he was later pronounced dead at the scene.

The Independent Investigations Office of B.C. had determined there were reasonable grounds to believe an officer may have committed offences, but the prosecution service says it found the evidence didn't meet its charge assessment standard and there was no substantial likelihood of a conviction.

There was "good quality" surveillance footage capturing relevant events at the hotel, the service's overview says.

The knife the man was carrying measured about 22 centimetres long and he was holding it with the blade extended towards police, it says.

The officer who used their gun was acting as "lethal overwatch" for the other officers and fired "almost simultaneous to" the first beanbag shot, it says.

The statement says the officer had no ability to retreat or otherwise create distance from the man in the hallway, which was an enclosed space, and the suspect would have been able to reach the officer within "half a second."

It concludes there was an objectively reasonable basis for the officer to believe the man posed a risk of harm or death, and the decision to use lethal force was necessary, reasonable, and proportionate in the circumstances.

Based on the evidence, the service says there was no substantial likelihood that the Crown could disprove at a trial that the force used was legally justified.

MORE National ARTICLES

Windstorm knocks out power to thousands of BC Hydro customers along south coast

Windstorm knocks out power to thousands of BC Hydro customers along south coast
An overnight windstorm along British Columbia's south coast has knocked out power for thousands. BC Hydro is reporting more 7,000 people along southern Vancouver Island woke up to outages on Tuesday.

Windstorm knocks out power to thousands of BC Hydro customers along south coast

B.C. plans 'substantive changes' for interprovincial trade

B.C. plans 'substantive changes' for interprovincial trade
British Columbia plans to enter a meeting with other provinces next week prepared to make "substantive changes" to its interprovincial trade barriers as the threat of hefty U.S. tariffs looms, Economic Development Minister Diana Gibson said. Gibson met virtually Friday with her provincial counterparts on the Committee on Internal Trade and said they were committed to reducing trade barriers within the country.

B.C. plans 'substantive changes' for interprovincial trade

Rain and possible snow melt set off high-water warnings for parts of B.C.

Rain and possible snow melt set off high-water warnings for parts of B.C.
A series of wet weather systems bringing rain and a warming trend has prompted high streamflow advisories for waterways on B.C.'s south coast and the lower half of Vancouver Island.  Environment Canada has issued rainfall warnings for Howe Sound and communities in north and eastern Metro Vancouver, saying as much as 100 millimetres of rain could fall by the end of the weekend. 

Rain and possible snow melt set off high-water warnings for parts of B.C.

Liberal party kicks Ruby Dhalla out of leadership race

Liberal party kicks Ruby Dhalla out of leadership race
The Liberal party has kicked Ruby Dhalla out of the leadership race just days before the contestants were to face off in two debates in Montreal. Party national director Azam Ishmael says in a statement published late Friday that the decision was made unanimously by the Liberal Leadership Vote Committee.

Liberal party kicks Ruby Dhalla out of leadership race

Earthquake shakes Vancouver and other B.C. cities

Earthquake shakes Vancouver and other B.C. cities
An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 5.1 has shaken Vancouver, Victoria and other B.C. cities. Natural Resources Canada says the quake was centred 24 kilometres north-northeast of Sechelt on the Sunshine Coast.

Earthquake shakes Vancouver and other B.C. cities

Heiltsuk Nation written constitution passes with 67 per cent of votes

Heiltsuk Nation written constitution passes with 67 per cent of votes
The Heiltsuk Nation has approved the adoption of a written constitution for the First Nation on British Columbia's central coast. The nation says 67 per cent of the 725 people who voted on the referendum were in favour of the constitution.

Heiltsuk Nation written constitution passes with 67 per cent of votes