Police, coroner analyze scene of multiple homicide in Surrey, B.C.
Bodies removed from crime scene, sent to coroner's office
Police released few details Sunday, but continued tosearch for clues ata Surrey, B.C., apartmentwhere six men were found deadon Friday.
Police said little Sunday about the caseother than they have neither identified allof the victims nornotified all of their next of kin, the CBC's Melanie Nagy reported.
The six men were found dead Fridayafternoon on the 15th floor unit of a high-risecondominiumat 9830 East Whalley Ring Road after someone called 911 about a suspected gas leak.
"We know at this time that this is not a random act," RCMP Cpl. Dale Carr of the Integrated Homicide Investigations Team said Sunday.
"We still haven'treally shored up who these individuals are," hesaid. "We're not 100 per cent on a couple of people. So for us to come out and start pointing fingers or putting labels on individuals, it'd be a bit premature."
Local media reported that some of thedead men were known to police and thattheir deaths may be related to a gang war over B.C.'s lucrative drug trade.
"Whether or not it's a drug war, or whether or not it's something else … we're open to all those possibilities," Carr said.
Over the weekend, investigators were still analyzing the complex crime scenein the small apartment unit and saidthat it was too early to say how the victimsdied.
Carr said the bodies were found in "various locations" and there was a lot of blood at the scene. It was unclear how long they had been in the apartment, although he said it wasn't "a great length of time."
Police believe thevictims mayhave been targeted, and have not ruled out the possibility of a murder-suicide, a domestic dispute or a gang-related incident.
But he also said that it is still too early in the investigation for police to release many details about what they are calling a multiple homicide in a single apartment.
Despite an initial report of a gas leak, Carr said officers did not smell any odours in the building when they arrived that indicated anything untoward had taken place.
There are no suspects yet in the investigation, he added.
Residents who live in the building told CBC News that police spentFriday night knocking on doors, asking them if they had seen any suspicious activity, and advising them to keep their doors locked.
Alloccupantswere evacuated from the 15th floor and it wasplaced under police control, Carr said, adding it may be another day before the police wrap up the crime scene investigation.