Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Father Remembers Son's Last Night Alive Before Winnipeg Police Shooting

The Canadian Press, 07 Nov, 2016 11:45 AM
    WINNIPEG — The father of a man shot and killed by Winnipeg police says he tried to run toward his son lying on the ground but was tackled by an officer.
     
    Brian McDougall told an inquest examining his son Craig McDougall's death eight years ago that the officer put his knee on the back of his neck.
     
    He says he was taken to police headquarters and only learned much later that his son was dead.
     
    But much of what happened before and after the incident was beyond recall for the elderly man, who delivered his testimony from a wheelchair.
     
    Craig McDougall, who was 26, was shot at his home after police responded to a report of an altercation.
     
    Police said McDougall had a knife in his hand and had refused repeated orders to drop it.
     
    McDougall's relatives have said he was carrying only a cellphone and was talking with his girlfriend, who heard four shots fired.
     
    This inquest, unlike some others in Manitoba, has been given a broader mandate to look at whether systemic racism played a role in the indigenous man's death.
     
    The victim's father is the first to testify in the inquest, which is scheduled to sit until next month.  

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Edmonton Judge To Decide On Mistrial In Travis Vader Murder Case Oct. 31.

    EDMONTON — An Edmonton judge says he will decide at the end of the month whether to declare a mistrial for a man he found guilty of murdering two seniors.

    Edmonton Judge To Decide On Mistrial In Travis Vader Murder Case Oct. 31.

    Controversial Filmmaker Nate Parker Receives Applause At Vancouver Film Festival

    Controversial Filmmaker Nate Parker Receives Applause At Vancouver Film Festival
      Parker has been criticized for comments he made during an interview with "60 Minutes" journalist Anderson Cooper that is scheduled to air Sunday.

    Controversial Filmmaker Nate Parker Receives Applause At Vancouver Film Festival

    Japanese Thwart Canadian Parents' Struggle To Access Abducted Children

    Japanese Thwart Canadian Parents' Struggle To Access Abducted Children
    Tim Terstege is planning to climb Mount Fuji on Oct. 13, the day four years ago his wife disappeared with his then-four-year-old son.

    Japanese Thwart Canadian Parents' Struggle To Access Abducted Children

    Hijab-Wearing Student Prevented From Taking Exam For Refusing To Show Ears

    Hijab-Wearing Student Prevented From Taking Exam For Refusing To Show Ears
    The Young Woman Refused To Partly Pull Back Her Islamic Scarf Because She Didn't Want To Show Her Male Teachers Her Ears.

    Hijab-Wearing Student Prevented From Taking Exam For Refusing To Show Ears

    War Canoe Takes Prince William And Kate To Haida Gwaii As Royal Tour Winds Down

    War Canoe Takes Prince William And Kate To Haida Gwaii As Royal Tour Winds Down
    HAIDA GWAII, B.C. — Prince William and Kate arrived at a small village off the coast of B.C. on Friday in a replica 15-metre Haida war canoe, ferried to the remote island by paddlers wearing T-shirts opposing liquefied natural gas development.

    War Canoe Takes Prince William And Kate To Haida Gwaii As Royal Tour Winds Down

    Prince William And Kate Spend Final Day Of Tour Focusing On Youth, Mental Health

    Prince William And Kate Spend Final Day Of Tour Focusing On Youth, Mental Health
    VICTORIA — The royal tour ends today, but before it closes Prince William and Kate will meet with social and mental health providers in Victoria.

    Prince William And Kate Spend Final Day Of Tour Focusing On Youth, Mental Health