Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Timeline of Vancouver vehicle attack that left 11 dead at Lapu Lapu Day festival

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Apr, 2025 11:21 AM
  • Timeline of Vancouver vehicle attack that left 11 dead at Lapu Lapu Day festival

A Lapu Lapu Day festival in Vancouver was meant to be a daylong celebration of Filipino culture.

Less that 15 minutes after events were scheduled to wrap up, an SUV tore through the area behind a school filled with food trucks, killing at least 11 people. 

Here is a timeline of the tragedy (all times Pacific):

Saturday 8 p.m. — The block party was scheduled to finished .

Saturday 8:14 p.m. — Police say a man driving a black Audi SUV approached the festival area from the west via East 43rd Avenue. The vehicle entered the food truck area and drove through the crowd. 

Witness Nic Magtajas described an SUV roaring through athigh speed.

“I saw a bunch of people go over, go high up from the impact of hitting the car,” said Magtajas, 19.

He and Jihed Issa were working at a store facing the festivaland said they initially had their backs to the scene when they heard a car engine revving.

“People were screaming,” said Issa, 17.

“I ran outside to the street and I was trying to figure out what happened. I made it to halfway into the street, looked around (and) there was a lot of people panicking, people on the floor — bodies.”

Video circulating on social media shows a young man in a black hoodie with his back against a chain-link fence, alongside a security guard and surrounded by bystanders screaming and swearing at him.

"I'm sorry," the man says, holding his hand to his head.

The province's emergency health services say every available primary care and advanced care paramedic, along with multiple supervisors and special teams responded with more than 22 vehicles.

Emergency officials later reported that 26 people were taken to nine hospitals. 

---

Sunday midnightVancouver Police confirmed a mass casualty event and said several people had been killed. Police said a 30-year-old Vancouver man was arrested at the scene. 

Interim Chief Steve Rai told reporters at the scene that the man was alone and was "known to police in certain circumstances."

---

Sunday 3:05 a.m. — Police confirm nine people died in the attack.

---

Sunday 9:30 a.m. — The death toll was raised to 11. Rai said the 30-year-old man arrested after the attack has a history ofinteractions with police as well as mental health professionals. The chief didn't release the suspect's name but said he's confident terrorism was not a motive.

He said homicide investigators were presenting evidence to prosecutors who were to decide whether to lay criminal charges.

----

Sunday 12:30 p.m. — Premier David Eby said it's hard "not to feel rage" at the man reasonable for the attack, but said he wanted to turn the rage he feels into standing with the Filipino community.

"This event does not define us," he said.

----

Sunday 5 p.m. — BC Prosecution Service charged Adam Kai-Ji Lo, 30, with eight counts of second-degree murder after the attack that killed 11 people. 

Police said Lo remains in custody "and further charges are anticipated."

A statement from police said some of the victims remain unidentified. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Rich Lam

MORE National ARTICLES

Environment minister says Donald Trump pulling out of Paris pact is

Environment minister says Donald Trump pulling out of Paris pact is
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault says it's "deplorable" that President Donald Trump is again pulling the U.S. out of the 2015 Paris Accord. He says it's "quite ironic" that President Trump is abandoning the global environmental pact while California is experiencing one of its worst forest fire seasons ever.

Environment minister says Donald Trump pulling out of Paris pact is

Federal immigration department to cut more than 3,300 jobs, unions say

Federal immigration department to cut more than 3,300 jobs, unions say
Two federal public service unions say the Immigration Department is set to cut 3,300 jobs. The Public Service Alliance of Canada and the Canada Employment and Immigration Union say in a joint statement that the department has not said who will be affected by the cuts.

Federal immigration department to cut more than 3,300 jobs, unions say

Man facing murder charges in triple homicide in Lloydminster

Man facing murder charges in triple homicide in Lloydminster
Police were called in September to do a wellness check at a home on the Saskatchewan side of the community. They found the bodies of Brent Peters, 66, and his sons Matthew Peters, 32, and Brennan Peters, 23.

Man facing murder charges in triple homicide in Lloydminster

Grain, crop, container shipments up for Prince Rupert port

Grain, crop, container shipments up for Prince Rupert port
The Port of Prince Rupert says cargo shipments were up at its container terminal for liquefied petroleum gas and crop exports, but volume for last year was down by one per cent from 2023.  The authority says in a statement that 23.1 million tonnes of cargo moved through the port, with metallurgical coal exports falling by 29 per cent and thermal coal down by 22 per cent.

Grain, crop, container shipments up for Prince Rupert port

Gang related shooting in Delta

Gang related shooting in Delta
Police in Delta say one person has been injured in a shooting this morning that investigators suspect to be gang-related. Police say they responded shortly after seven a-m to a report of a shooting at the 81-hundred block of 112-B Street.

Gang related shooting in Delta

Donald Trump doesn't mention Canada in inaugural speech as Trudeau calls for unity

Donald Trump doesn't mention Canada in inaugural speech as Trudeau calls for unity
Trump's speech offered no clarity on the status of his threat to impose a 25 per cent across-the-board tariff on Canadian products on day one of his new administration — part of a massive agenda aimed at leading a deeply divided U.S. on a starkly different path.

Donald Trump doesn't mention Canada in inaugural speech as Trudeau calls for unity