Off the wire
Ist LD Writethru: Indian troops kill 2 militants in Indian-controlled Kashmir  • Urgent: Acting chief Okada wins DPJ presidential election  • New York Governor plans first trade mission to Cuba  • 1st LD Writethru: Suicide car bombing rocks S. Afghanistan, injuring 2  • DPRK negotiator, former U.S. diplomats meet unofficially in Singapore  • 2nd LD Writethru-China Focus: China home prices fall as trends diverge among cities  • 23 militants surrender in N. Afghanistan  • Two more police officers shot dead in Pakistan's Karachi  • Five killed in drunk driving accident in NE China  • Urgent: Suicide car bombing injures one in S. Afghanistan  
You are here:   Home

Suspect in shooting of two Canadian police officers found dead

Xinhua, January 18, 2015 Adjust font size:

The suspect in the shooting of two Canadian police officers in Western Canada's province of Alberta was dead, the police announced on Saturday.

The suspect was found dead inside an unoccupied private home in a rural area in northwest part of Edmonton, the police told news conference in the provincial capital of Alberta. They have tentatively identified the man but had not released his name.

The man had forced his way into his home after fleeing the scene of the shooting at the Apex Casino in Edmonton, according to the police.

After the shooting, the police tracked the suspect to the residence in Sturgeon County, east of St. Albert in northwest of Edmonton and found his body when they entered the residence, said Marlin Degrand, criminal operations officer with the Alberta police department. The cause of death and identity of the man had yet to be released but it was possible of a suicide.

The two police officers were shot inside the casino around 3 a.m.on Saturday as they were called to investigate a stolen vehicle in the parking lot near the casino, Degrand said.

He also said the two police officers were seriously wounded and hospitalized, one in critical condition.

"This incident serves to remind us of the dangers that our front-line responders everywhere face in the performance of their duties," he said. Endi