Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gunman angry about not getting passport, had drug problems, say shelter mates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2014 11:26 AM

    OTTAWA - The man who killed a soldier at the National War Memorial was angry about failing to get a passport and struggled with drug addiction, say those who knew him at the downtown Ottawa men's shelter where he spent the last two weeks.

    Michael Zehaf Bibeau so angered some of the men at the Ottawa Mission because of his complaints about Canada that there was almost a fight in recent days, said Norman LeBlanc, a 60-year-old former truck driver who frequents the shelter.

    "He went on for more than an hour about how much this country sucked and how he wanted to get out of here, and he was furious about the passport," LeBlanc said outside the mission Thursday.

    "That made a lot of the others guys mad, and they were going to take him out back and give him a beating."

    Hours after the shooting Wednesday, police descended upon the mission, removing a hockey bag of materials from Zehaf Bibeau's locker that was so heavy it required two men to haul it outside into an armoured vehicle, LeBlanc added.

    At a news conference later Thursday, the RCMP wouldn't elaborate on what was inside that hockey bag.

    Zehaf Bibeau often prayed with two Somali men in the shelter in an east-facing window in accordance with the Muslim faith, he added.

    One of them, Abdel Kareem Abubakrr, denied his new friend's actions had anything to do with his faith.

    "He was suffering from drug addiction; he'd been clean for three months," he said. "He was a crackhead, I think."

    Abubakrr said Zehaf Bibeau told the men at the shelter that he had left Vancouver for Ottawa in an attempt to obtain a passport. The Somali man said his new prayer-mate wanted to leave Canada to get treatment for his addiction because he didn't feel he could get help in Canada.

    Three days ago, Abubakkr said, Zehaf Bibeau began taking drugs again and began espousing "extremist ideas" after his passport application was rejected.

    He didn't elaborate about the nature of the extremist ideas.

    "He was a good guy, he was talkative, a very lovely person, but he was a drug addict," Abubakrr said. "In the last three days, he shifted."

    LeBlanc, however, disputed the notion that Zehaf Bibeau was back on drugs. In fact, he said, Zehaf Bibeau was overheard on a pay phone in the days prior to the shooting, talking to various car rental agencies about obtaining a vehicle.

    "No one in a drug stupor is doing that; there's no way."

    The RCMP says Bibeau had actually purchased a car on Tuesday. The Mounties also confirmed he'd come to Ottawa to try to get a passport.

    "I think the passport figured prominently in his motives," RCMP commissioner Bob Paulson told a news conference.

    Video footage aired on CBC shows Zehaf Bibeau, 32, coolly getting into a car immediately after shooting and killing Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, a reservist from Hamilton who was standing guard at the National War Memorial.

    More footage was released Thursday at Paulson's news conference. It shows Zehaf Bibeau leaving his car and running towards the Centre Block of Parliament Hill as bystanders flee in all directions. He commandeers another car, drives up to the front of the building and runs inside.

    Moments later, Zehaf Bibeau died in a gunfight in the Hall of Honour.

    A search of the publicly available Quebec court records database indicates a man by Bibeau's name had a lengthy criminal record with several convictions and brushes with the law in the early and mid-2000s. According to the records, the man would have turned 32 last week, on Oct. 16.

    The records appear under three different names — Michael Bibeau, Michael Zehaf Bibeau and Michael Bibeau Zehaf.

    The last time his name appears in the provincial court database is for a charge in 2006. For that marijuana-related count, he pleaded guilty in court in 2009 and received an absolute discharge.

    A source has also said that Zehaf Bibeau had been denied a passport "in the normal course of applying," but he was not under surveillance by security officials.

    Zehaf Bibeau's mother, Susan Bibeau, released a statement on Thursday apologizing for her son's actions.

    "We have no explanation to offer," the statement read.

    "I am mad at our son; I don't understand and part of me wants to hate him at this time .... (He) was lost and did not fit in. I, his mother, spoke with him last week over lunch; I had not seen him for over five years before that. So I have very little insight to offer."

    Another man at the mission, Tom Wilson, said Zehaf Bibeau slept in the bunk beneath him on his first night at the shelter after they checked in together two weeks ago.

    "He had this big hockey bag that he put down on the ground and it sounded like it was really heavy so I asked him, just as a joke: 'What, have you got a body in there? What the hell is in there?'" said Wilson.

    "This past Sunday, I saw him down in the lobby all irritated about something, saying: 'I gotta get out of here.'"

    A man at a Vancouver shelter, who would only be identified by his first name, Steve, said he knew Zehaf Bibeau.

    The would-be gunman and Steve got acquainted in rehab two years ago, but more recently Zehaf Bibeau said he wanted to go to Libya, his father's birthplace.

    Zehaf Bibeau said he was getting paid cash as a mover and unloading trailers, Steve said, and spent money on crack and heroin.

    "He had some problem with his passport and he wanted to get that sorted out so he could go to Libya," he said. "He hitchhiked from here some time in September to get to Ottawa."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cases of metal found in potatoes rises to six in Atlantic Canada, RCMP say

    Cases of metal found in potatoes rises to six in Atlantic Canada, RCMP say
    SUMMERSIDE, P.E.I. - Police in Prince Edward Island say the number of reports of potatoes containing metal objects in them has risen to six during the last week.

    Cases of metal found in potatoes rises to six in Atlantic Canada, RCMP say

    Canadian AP journalist wounded in Afghanistan vows to return there to work

    Canadian AP journalist wounded in Afghanistan vows to return there to work
    NEW YORK - Over and over, Canadian AP journalist Kathy Gannon has re-lived the decisions that led to the death of her close friend Anja Niedringhaus and her own severe injuries, as they went about their jobs chronicling the story of Afghanistan.

    Canadian AP journalist wounded in Afghanistan vows to return there to work

    NDP seeks more info on emergency plan for Ebola outbreak in Canada

    NDP seeks more info on emergency plan for Ebola outbreak in Canada
    OTTAWA - New Democrats are asking the federal government to be more transparent about the steps being taken to prevent an Ebola outbreak in Canada and to produce a vaccine for the deadly virus.

    NDP seeks more info on emergency plan for Ebola outbreak in Canada

    Magnotta first-degree murder trial hears again from forensic biologist

    Magnotta first-degree murder trial hears again from forensic biologist
    MONTREAL - Luka Rocco Magnotta's first-degree murder trial has heard that most of the attempts at cleaning his blood-spattered apartment were poorly done.

    Magnotta first-degree murder trial hears again from forensic biologist

    Avalanche, blizzard kill 12 people, including 4 Canadians in Nepal

    Avalanche, blizzard kill 12 people, including 4 Canadians in Nepal
    KATMANDU, Nepal - An avalanche and a blizzard in Nepal's mountainous north have killed 12 people, including four Canadians, officials said Wednesday.

    Avalanche, blizzard kill 12 people, including 4 Canadians in Nepal

    Mom of first woman killed in Afghanistan combat proud vessel named for daughter

    Mom of first woman killed in Afghanistan combat proud vessel named for daughter
    HALIFAX - The mother of the first Canadian woman to be killed in Afghanistan in a combat role says she feels her daughter would be proud to have a coast guard vessel named after her.

    Mom of first woman killed in Afghanistan combat proud vessel named for daughter