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Police identify suspect vehicle linked to killing of Ripudaman Singh Malik

Police have identifieda suspect vehicle linked to the targeted killing ofRipudamanSinghMalik, a manwho was acquitted in the Air India bombings and shot dead on Thursday.

Vehicle waited for Malik outside family business before he was shot, IHIT says

Police release footage of suspect vehicle linked to Ripudaman Singh Malik shooting

2 years ago
Duration 2:39
Police in B.C. released new video on Friday of a vehicle they believe is linked to the killing of Ripudaman Singh Malik, a man who was acquitted in the Air India bombings.

Police have identifieda vehicle linked to the targeted killing ofRipudamanSinghMalik, a manwho was acquitted in the Air India bombings and shot dead on Thursday.

The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT)released footage on Friday of a white Honda CRVbelieved to have been used by the person,or people,responsible for the killing.

Police said theSUVwaited for Malikon Thursday outside his family business, Papillon Eastern Imports, located at 8236 128 Street. IHIT said the vehicleparkedaround 7 a.m. PT and waited there for more than an hour.

Malik, 75,was shot "several times" at 9:27 a.m.

Shortly after, the SUV wasfound on firein the area of 82 Avenue and 122AStreet, roughly two kilometres away.

A man with a long grey beard and glasses is flanked by other men at a press scrum. He is wearing a black turban and a grey suit.
Ripudaman Singh Malik, centre, was shot and killed after leaving his family business in Surrey, B.C. (Richard Lam/The Canadian Press)

Investigators said they were still canvassing for CCTV footage and couldn't say whether the shooting itselfhad been caught on video.

Anyone with dashcamfootage from the area of the shooting between7 and 9 a.m. on Thursday, or who might have seen the CRVandthe people inside, is asked to contact IHIT.

Malik's family ran thePapillonclothing company, which isbased in the building where he was killed. Hisred Tesla wasvisiblein theparking lot afterthe shooting.

At a news conference Friday, IHIT said investigators were still confirming whether the suspect vehiclewas stolen. Sgt. David Lee said he could not confirm how many people might have been in the SUV to avoid tainting any witnesses' memories.

Air India case

Malik and his co-accused, Ajaib Singh Bagri, were acquitted in 2005 of mass murder and conspiracy charges related to the pair of bombings in 1985 that killed 331 people, mostly from the Toronto and Vancouver areas.

In recent years, Malikserved as chairman with Khalsa School and managed two of the private schools' campuses in Surrey and Vancouver. He was also president of the Surrey-based Khalsa Credit Union, which has more than 16,000 members.

A number of police officers are seen near yellow crime tape and a red sedan.
Malik's red Tesla is seen after the shooting in Surrey, B.C., on Thursday. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

IHIT confirmed Malik'sidentity on Thursday and acknowledged his high-profile link to the bombings, but said officers were still working to determine a motive.

"We understand this is a high-profile, international story.However, we urge [people] not to speculateas to the motive as our homicide investigators will be following the evidence," said Lee.

The death of Malik, an influential businessman who had significant influence within Canada's Sikh community,drew mixed reactions on Thursday. Some said the community had lost a respected advocate, while others thought only of the bombings.

"I was surprised when I heard the news. It just brings back and triggers all the memories of the last 37 years and the pains and the failures of the last 37 years," said DeepakKhandelwal, an executive with the Air India Victim's Families Associationwho lost two sisters in the bombings.

Nishi Thampi, whose mother died in the bombing, said Malik's death made her feel as if the chance to get answers about what happened in 1985 was farther away.

"We've lost an important link to the source of truth," she said.

WATCH | Daughter of Air India bombing victim reacts to Malik's death

Daughter of Air India victim still looking for answers

2 years ago
Duration 9:07
Nishi Thampi, whose mother died in the 1985 Air India terrorist bombings, spoke with CBC News about her reaction to the deadly shooting of one of the men acquitted in the attack.

Malik had a wife and five children.Asked whether Malik's family is co-operating with investigators, Lee said he couldn't provide details but thatpolice were in contact.

"I can't discuss exactly what the family's spoken with us about, but ... we are in contact to find out what support they require," Lee said.

Crown lawyers alleged the bombing was a terrorist attack against state-owned Air India, an act of revenge by B.C.-based Sikh extremists against the Indian government for ordering the army to raid Sikhism's holiest shrine, the Golden Temple in Amritsar, in June 1984.

Only one man was convicted in relation to the crime. Inderjit Singh Reyat served 30 years for lying during two trials, including Malik's, and for helping to make the bombs at his home in Duncan, B.C.

Ripudaman Singh Malik, left, leaves B.C. Supreme Court in 2005 after being acquitted in the 1985 bombing of an Air India flight. Malik was shot and killed in Surrey, B.C., on Thursday. (Lyle Stafford/REUTERS)

Malik, then 58, and Bagri, then 55, were acquittedafter a highly publicized trial that stretched on foryears.

Justice Ian Josephson found the Crown's key witnesses, who testified they heard the two defendants confess, were biased and unreliable.

The national Air India inquiry later concludedTalwinder Singh Parmarwas the mastermind behind the deadly mid-air bombing. Parmar, 48, was shot and killed by police in India in 1992.

Another suspect, Hardial Singh Johal, died in November 2002.

Security footage shows suspect vehicle linked to killing of Ripudaman Singh Malik

2 years ago
Duration 0:09
Homicide investigators have released CCTV video showing a white Honda CRV believed to have been used by the person, or people, who fatally shot Ripudaman Singh Malik in Surrey, B.C.

With files from Meera Bains and Rhianna Schmunk