Skip to main content

3-year-old boy dies after drowning in backyard pool west of Toronto

A Halton Regional Police cruiser is seen in this undated image. (Twitter/Halton Regional Police) A Halton Regional Police cruiser is seen in this undated image. (Twitter/Halton Regional Police)

Police are investigating the death of a three-year-old boy who was pulled from a backyard pool in Oakville on Saturday.

The incident happened at a residence in the area of Speers Road and Third Line.

Halton Regional Police Service (HRPS) said emergency responders were called to the scene shortly after 7 p.m.

According to police, there had been a “celebratory gathering of several adults and children at a private residence and the child had gone underwater and apparently undetected for an undetermined period of time.”

Investigators said adults immediately began life-saving measures, which were continued by emergency services personnel once they arrived at the scene.

“Despite efforts to revive the child, sadly he was pronounced deceased at hospital,” HRPS said in a Sunday news release.

The name of the child as well as further details about those who attended the gathering are not being released, police said.

Halton Regional Police Service’s Homicide Bureau in partnership with the Coroner’s Office, investigates all deaths involving children under the age of five.

At this point, no charges have been laid and police said that they have also determined there is no criminality in this case.

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Canada-India tensions: How we got here and what's at stake

In the past month, Canada has accused the Indian government of being involved in a murder on Canadian soil and India has ordered Canada to remove most of its diplomats from the country. Here's how the two countries got to this point, as well as what's at stake if tensions don't ease.

Rideau Hall apologizes for honouring Nazi veteran, Trudeau 'carefully' considering unsealing records

Rideau Hall is apologizing for the historic appointment of a man who fought for a Nazi unit in the Second World War, to the Order of Canada. Now, Gov. Gen. Mary Simon's office says it is examining two subsequent medals granted in the last two decades. This, as Jewish advocacy groups say the recent and resurfacing recognitions further make their case for the need to unseal Holocaust-related records.

Stay Connected