Wednesday, June 24, 2026
ADVT 
National

RCMP Investigating Surrey's Gun Violence Problem, Making Arrests, Seizing Drugs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Apr, 2016 12:03 PM
    SURREY, B.C. — Mounties in Surrey, B.C., say they investigating more than two dozen shooting complaints that have left one person dead and five injured so far this year.
     
    Officers have responded to 28 complaints since Jan. 1, nine involving shots being fired into a building or residence and two of bullet casings being found.
     
    Mounties say the incidents are not believed to be linked to groups involved in last year's drug violence, though the complaints are tied to the drug trade.
     
     
    Gunfire on Surrey streets made headlines in early 2015, when police said a group of South Asians and those of Somali descent were involved in a low-level drug conflict. 
     
    Mounties say four people have been arrested and that the March 16 seizure of $4.5 million in drugs was one of the largest in the city's history.
     
    "It was an ongoing investigation, you know, a continued strategy on our part, that we pulled this individual over," said Surrey RCMP Superintendent Shawn Gill, adding that no weapons were found in the vehicle.
     
     
    "We are attacking this situation now and we are attacking it aggressively," RCMP Supt. Shawn Gill says in a news release. "With the intelligence we are receiving, our proactive enforcement teams are making it very difficult for these people to conduct their illegal business in our city."
     
    Mounties say 30-year-old Pardip Hayer of Abbotsford faces four counts of trafficking in a controlled substance arising out of the seizure earlier this month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Montreal Police Seize Guns, Drugs And Cash In Predawn Raids Targeting Drug Trade

    A Montreal police spokesman said officers also seized more than $100,000 cash, two firearms and an undetermined amount of drugs including cocaine, crystal meth and amphetamines.

    Montreal Police Seize Guns, Drugs And Cash In Predawn Raids Targeting Drug Trade

    The Way Is Paved For Segways To Become Legal On Nova Scotia's Roads

    The Way Is Paved For Segways To Become Legal On Nova Scotia's Roads
    Nova Scotia's transportation minister is among those who have taken the scooters for a spin, and he believes they can safely share the road.

    The Way Is Paved For Segways To Become Legal On Nova Scotia's Roads

    Five Things To Watch For In The Canadian Business World In The Coming Week

    Five Things To Watch For In The Canadian Business World In The Coming Week
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris that kicks off Monday. 

    Five Things To Watch For In The Canadian Business World In The Coming Week

    Conservatives Cool Their Heels, Eye 2017 Leadership Vote

    OTTAWA — Familiar, experienced Conservatives will take their places on the opposition benches this week in the Commons, but behind them is a party that is exhausted, in organizational limbo, and only slowly beginning to plan for a leadership race.

    Conservatives Cool Their Heels, Eye 2017 Leadership Vote

    B.C. Climate Report Says Hike Carbon Tax, Extend Reduction Targets To 2050

    In the report released Friday, a climate leadership team concluded the province will fail to meet its 2020 targets and recommends focusing emission-reduction targets for 2030 and 2050.

    B.C. Climate Report Says Hike Carbon Tax, Extend Reduction Targets To 2050

    UBC Graduate Student Society Launches Confidential Harassment Reporting Website

    UBC Graduate Student Society Launches Confidential Harassment Reporting Website
    The university's graduate student society has launched a website called "My Grad Story" that encourages students to share their experiences through an online form, a private appointment or by sharing publicly on social media.

    UBC Graduate Student Society Launches Confidential Harassment Reporting Website