
Autopsy finds southwest Edmonton shooting death a homicide
An Edmonton Police Service cruiser and an ambulance. (Matt Marshall/CTV News Edmonton)
An autopsy on the body of a man who died after a shooting in southwest Edmonton has found he died by homicide.
Edmonton police answered a call of a shooting on Wednesday at 12:38 a.m. in the area of 16 Avenue and 65 Street SW, where they found an injured 40-year-old Inderpal Singh. He died at the scene.
The medical examiner determined from the autopsy that Singh died from gunshot wounds and that the manner of death is homicide.
Edmonton homicide detectives have now taken over the case.
Anyone with information about the shooting is asked to call police at 780-423-4567.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
18 minutes ago
- CBC
Missing 17-year-old girl last seen in Winnipeg's North End
Social Sharing A missing girl was last seen in Winnipeg's North End on Monday afternoon. Faith-Lynn Hope Fontaine, 17, was last seen around 4:15 p.m. at the corner of McGregor Street and St. Johns Avenue. Fontaine is described as five feet, nine inches tall, about 110 pounds with a thin build, blond hair and hazel eyes. Anyone with information is asked to contact the missing persons unit at 204-986-6250.


CTV News
25 minutes ago
- CTV News
Alberta elementary school ditches library and other rooms because of ‘significant growth'
Rocky View Schools says several of its schools, such as Airdrie's École Edwards Elementary, are making changes due to 'significant growth' without provincial support. (File/Google Maps) Parents of a southern Alberta elementary school are being informed of some big changes that could affect their students' learning in the fall. Administration at École Edwards Elementary in Airdrie, Alta., says the school will be adding a grade in September as the institution shifts from a K-5 to a K-6 school. Enrollment will jump from 675 students to approximately 850, according to a letter sent to families on Monday. To accommodate these students, administration said the school's library, music room and wellness centre will all be converted into classroom space. In addition, École Edwards says it will adopt a 'team-teaching' model for some grades, where multiple teachers will teach students in the larger spaces. Administrators said a request to the province was made for modular classrooms but 'was not approved.' 'Nooks and shared spaces' Staff said library books will be moved to different locations throughout the school: five classroom libraries will be created in the new Grade 6 classrooms; a smaller collection of books will be provided to K-3 students; and additional books will be distributed in 'nooks and shared spaces.' 'These changes allow us to meet the instructional needs of our students within our existing footprint, while continuing to prioritize access to quality resources and enriching learning environments,' administrators wrote in the letter. 'Had to be creative' Rocky View Schools (RVS), the board that operates École Edwards, says the changes at the facility are due to an influx of students in the district. A spokesperson for RVS said the board has been trying to make do with available resources. 'RVS has been experiencing significant growth for years without new schools or enough modular classrooms to keep pace,' Tara de Weerd, RVS communications director, said in an email to CTV News Tuesday. 'The government recently approved new schools but with the three to four years it takes to build a school and only five modular classrooms approved this year, schools have had to be creative about balancing space within their schools maximizing every single room.' de Weerd says other schools in the district have had to make similar moves to École Edwards. 'I can assure you our administrators do an excellent job of continuing to prioritize literacy, wellness and other important aspects of student learning,' she said. Meanwhile, École Edwards says classrooms will be packing up and moving to the new spaces throughout June. 'We recognize that change can bring many emotions. Our focus is to ensure all students feel supported, valued and excited about their learning experience at École Edwards,' officials said. CTV News has reached out to Alberta Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides' office about these changes.


CTV News
29 minutes ago
- CTV News
Ontario police announce record fentanyl bust; more than 43 kilograms seized
An Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) patch is seen in Ottawa, on September 29, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby Ontario Provincial Police have seized a record 43.5 kilograms of fentanyl following two separate investigations, including one aimed at dismantling a dark web-based trafficking network. Police announced the results of Project Bionic and Project Golden on Tuesday at a news conference. They said the drugs seized equate to 435,000 potentially lethal street-level doses of the powerful synthetic Commissioner Thomas Carrique called both investigations 'historic,' noting that Project Bionic's five-month probe into the dark web was the first of its kind. 'As drug trafficking networks evolve in complexity, so too must out investigative strategies. Today's results demonstrate how our approach continues to address this growing threat,' he said in a statement. Carrique added that the 38 kilograms of fentanyl seized as a result of Project Golden is the OPP's largest fentanyl seizure to date. Members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Hamilton Police Service participated in the investigations. In addition to the drugs seized between the two investigations, police said they seized large quantities of cocaine, methamphetamine, MDMA, heroin, ketamine and prescription drugs. This is a breaking news story. More to come.