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Festival suspect had mental health team, no sign he needed hospitalization: ministry

The statement from British Columbia’s Ministry of Health says Adam Kai-Ji Lo was being followed closely under the Mental Health Act.

Updated
3 min read
CP NewsAlert: Eby wants inquiry if festival crash isn't resolved by criminal charges

People pray during a vigil for the victims of an attack that killed 11 people at a Vancouver Lapu Lapu festival, in Ottawa, on Monday, April 28, 2025. A person drove a car into a crowd of people at the festival in Vancouver on Saturday April 26, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Tanouye


VICTORIA - The man accused of killing 11 people at a Vancouver festival was under the care of a mental health team, but there was nothing to indicate a change in his condition that warranted involuntarily hospitalization, British Columbia鈥檚 Health Ministry said Tuesday.聽

A ministry statement says the man alleged to have driven an SUV through a crowd of festival goers was “being followed closely” under the Mental Health Act by his Vancouver Coastal Health care team.

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