Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

17-Year-Old Suspect In Saskatchewan Shooting Teased, Called Himself 'Black Sheep:' Friends

The Canadian Press, 26 Jan, 2016 12:41 PM
    LA LOCHE, Sask. — A 17-year-old boy accused of shooting four people to death in a remote Saskatchewan community described himself as an "outcast" at home and victim of bullying at school, say his friends.
     
    The teen, who made his first court appearance Monday, was known to hold his emotions inside and rarely spoke, even when hanging out with his high school buddies in La Loche.
     
    "He was the black sheep of the family," said Noel Desjarlais-Thomas, who described the accused as one of several friends who always hung out together.
     
    The 16-year-old said the teen suspect would message the others in his circle of friends about not being treated equally or fairly by his family.
     
    "He just said he was going to do something. He never really said much after that," Desjarlais-Thomas said Monday.
     
    "We'd ask 'Why?' He never really told much. After that, it would just go blank. The conversation would just stop and something else would happen, the subject would (change.) No one ever thought this was going to happen."
     
    Perry Herman, who also knows the accused, said the teen was teased about his large ears.
     
    "So many of those times that those boys joked around with him about his ears and whatnot, he didn't get up and say, `You boys stop talking to me like this, it's hurting my feelings.' He just bottled it up."
     
    Herman said the bullying must have been going on for a long time.
     
    The suspect, who can't be named under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, is charged with four counts of first-degree murder and seven counts of attempted murder.
     
    Brothers Drayden Fontaine, 13, and Dayne Fontaine, 17, were found dead in a house last Friday. Teacher's aide Maria Janvier, 21, died at the school, while teacher Adam Wood, 35, died in hospital.
     
     
    The boy's lawyer, Ian Mokuruk, said he was contacted on the weekend to represent the accused at his first court appearance.  Asked outside court how his client was doing, Mokuruk said: "He's upset. Much like his demeanour in court, he was not at all happy, which is understandable. It's a very tragic situation."
     
    The teen's family members were in court, but left without speaking to reporters.
     
    Desjarlais-Thomas and another friend, George Janvier, were both inside La Loche Community School on Friday when gunfire broke out. They fled the area, one racing to safety outside, the other barricading himself inside the gym change room.
     
    Janvier, 16, said he and his friends have since been discussing what could have motivated the attack that also wounded seven people.
     
    Both friends said they were aware of at least one other teen who regularly picked on the accused. Neither boy could describe what form the teasing took, other than recalling jokes were made or people would act "tough" toward him.
     
    But they both understood the accused didn't like it.
     
    "He once said that, 'Some day I'm going to eff-up (the bully). I'm going to beat him up. He said that like a couple times,' " said Janvier.
     
    Mostly, the teenagers simply knew the accused as an introverted peer who hung out with them every day.
     
    Desjarlais-Thomas doesn't understand what could have happened.
     
    "It's a mystery," said Desjarlais-Thomas.
     
    "He didn't seem like that type of guy."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba's Planned Electoral Reform Could Lead To Lower Voting Age

    Manitoba's Planned Electoral Reform Could Lead To Lower Voting Age
    WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government's plan to revamp the electoral system could lead to a younger voting age.

    Manitoba's Planned Electoral Reform Could Lead To Lower Voting Age

    Canadians Recall Their Refugee Past As They Write Cheques For Syrian Families

    Canadians Recall Their Refugee Past As They Write Cheques For Syrian Families
    HALIFAX — Writing a cheque for a Syrian refugee family gave Gabrielle Horne a powerful sense of connection to her own grandparents.

    Canadians Recall Their Refugee Past As They Write Cheques For Syrian Families

    Vancouver Police Arrest Grinches, Find Stolen Presents

    Vancouver Police Arrest Grinches, Find Stolen Presents
    Police say they received a call around 6 p.m. Christmas Eve about men breaking into a car in a downtown parking lot.

    Vancouver Police Arrest Grinches, Find Stolen Presents

    American Faces 4 Charges After Machete Attack In Downtown Toronto

    American Faces 4 Charges After Machete Attack In Downtown Toronto
    A security guard said he wasn't really thinking about much in the seconds before rushing a man who had allegedly just attacked another man with a machete in downtown Toronto.

    American Faces 4 Charges After Machete Attack In Downtown Toronto

    Hong Kong Man, 27 Finds Christmas Cheer In Yukon, Thanks To Social Media Post

    WHITEHORSE — Residents of Yukon are reaching out to a Hong Kong man who doesn't want to spend Christmas alone.

    Hong Kong Man, 27 Finds Christmas Cheer In Yukon, Thanks To Social Media Post

    Supreme Court Dismisses Appeals From B.C. Murderer And Montreal Woman

    Supreme Court Dismisses Appeals From B.C. Murderer And Montreal Woman
    The Supreme Court of Canada announced Thursday it won't hear appeals from Peter Quon San Wong and Elena-Gabriela Zugravescu.

    Supreme Court Dismisses Appeals From B.C. Murderer And Montreal Woman