Fitness hearing for Adam Kai-Ji Lo, accused of 11 murders at Vancouver festival

Debris is seen on East 43rd Avenue in Vancouver, where a vehicle drove into crowd at a Lapu Lapu Day festival the night before, on Sunday April 27, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Rich Lam

VANCOUVER - The man accused of ramming an SUV into a crowd and killing 11 people at the Vancouver Lapu Lapu Day festival is set to appear in court today, with a judge determining if he's fit to stand trial.

RJ Aquino, the chair of festival organizer Filipino BC, says the court proceedings could prove traumatizing for victims and members of the Filipino community.

He says many have expressed anger and frustration since the April 26 attack and still find it difficult to cope with the tragedy almost three months later.

Thirty-year-old Adam Kai-Ji Lo faces 11 charges of second-degree murder, after police announced Tuesday that three additional charges had been approved.

Police say six injured remain in hospital in stable condition.

B.C.'s Health Ministry said in a statement after the attack that Lo was "being followed closely" under the Mental Health Act by a Vancouver Coastal Health care team at the time of the attack. 

The statement said Lo gave "no indication of violence" and nothing appeared to warrant involuntary hospitalization before the attack.

Lo is set to appear in Vancouver provincial court for a two-day fitness hearing, where a judge will determine if he is fit for a trial that could be months away.

A media consortium that includes °µÍø½ûÇø plans to challenge a publication ban on the hearing that is being sought by the Crown. 

Under the proposed ban, evidence arising at the hearing would not be publishable until the ban is lifted or after the end of the trial. 

However, it says that the existence and outcome of the fitness hearing may be reported.

Aquino says community members of the Filipino community will be watching the hearing closely.

Many want "speedy closure," he says, but justice takes time.

Aquino says Filipino BC will prepare for all possible outcomes, and support for victims' families and community members will continue. 

"We want to make sure that we're providing the support that the community needs, we're able to continue to be present with each other as we inevitably revisit what had happened through these proceedings."

Dozens of people were injured in the attack in East Vancouver, in which the black SUV sped through a street crowded with festivalgoers. Police said in June that seven victims remained in hospital.

This report by °µÍø½ûÇø was first published July 23, 2025. 

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