Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

'I'm Sorry Man:' Teen Gunman In La Loche School Shooting Had Regrets

The Canadian Press, 19 May, 2017 11:36 AM
    MEADOW LAKE, Sask. — A teen gunman who killed four people at a home and in a school in northern Saskatchewan told police he had regrets about the shooting. 
     
    Dayne and Drayden Fontaine were killed at their house in La Loche in January 2016 before the shooter went to the high school, where he killed a teacher and a teacher's aide, and wounded seven others.
     
    The teen was asked in a videotaped police interview, which was played at his sentencing hearing Thursday, how he felt when he thought about killing the two brothers.
     
    "I didn't plan to shoot them, man ... They weren't part of the plan," he said, crying, in the video.
     
    The officer asked him what the plan was.
     
    "Go to the school and shoot the f---ing kids," said the teen.
     
    The teen was also asked what he would say to Dayne and Drayden now. 
     
     
    "Tell them that I'm sorry, man."
     
    The video was recorded Oct. 29, 2016 — the day after the teen pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree murder, two counts of second-degree murder and seven counts of attempted murder.
     
    Defence lawyer Aaron Fox said outside court Thursday that the video shows his client's behaviour.
     
    "I think some of it's obvious that he has some issues, with some cognitive issues and some social issues, and some developmental issues, and I think that's consistent with some of the evidence we see elsewhere as well," said Fox.
     
    The sentencing hearing is to determine if the teen, who can't be named because he was just shy of his 18th birthday at the time of the shootings, should be sentenced as a youth or an adult.
     
    The Crown will call more witnesses Friday and then the hearing will be adjourned until June 13. Fox said the Crown is expected to have one more day of evidence when the hearing resumes in June, and then the defence will present its case.
     
    Some victims have already told the court that the teen should be sentenced as an adult because of the severity of the crime.
     
     
    Court has heard that shooting happened when the teen and the brothers were on lunch break from school. They went to the brothers'  home, where the teen got a rifle out of a bedroom.
     
    He shot Dayne Fontaine 11 times — twice in the head — and Drayden twice, including in the back of the head.
     
    The boys' mother, Alicia Fontaine, told court in Meadow Lake, Sask., that the teen gunman called her two days after the shooting to apologize.
     
    "I may be angry, but I'm not angry at him," Fontaine said.
     
    "I talked to him. He was crying. I forgave him. You can forgive, but you'll never forget."
     
    If it were up to her, Fontaine said, she would not press charges in the deaths of her sons.
     
    "It is true, my whole world is gone, but I know my babies are in a place where there is no pain," she said. "I have forgiven you."
     
     
    The shooter's mother said the family has also forgiven her son for "this horrible crime."
     
    "I was in shock like everyone else," she told court. "I never knew this was going to happen." 
     
    The teen's mother said she feels guilty, although she knows the shooting wasn't her fault.
     
    "I am not a bad mother or person. If I knew and seen the signs that he was struggling in life, I could have stopped all of this from happening," she said.
     
    "Sometimes, as parents, we are unaware of the struggles that our children have."
     
    Video surveillance from the school shows the teen walking and running through hallways firing a shotgun. Teacher Adam Wood and teacher's aide Marie Janvier were killed and seven others were hurt.
     
    In the police interview, the teen is asked who he was targeting when he went into the school.
     
    "Nobody," he replied.
     
     
    The officer asked the teen who he was looking for when he was trying to open doors.
     
    "Teachers and students," he said.
     
    The defence has said there is no simple reason behind the shooting and little about the motive has been made clear so far.
     
    Earlier in the interview, the shooter said he never felt bullied. The officer also asked the teen if he felt the school had "wronged" him.
     
    "Not really," he said. "I don't think so, no."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Liberals Back Down On Parliamentary Changes, But Closure Will Be Cost: Bardish Chagger

    Liberals Back Down On Parliamentary Changes, But Closure Will Be Cost: Bardish Chagger
    OTTAWA — Government House leader Bardish Chagger is putting her opposition colleagues on notice that the Liberals will be invoking closure on debate in the Commons a lot more often.

    Liberals Back Down On Parliamentary Changes, But Closure Will Be Cost: Bardish Chagger

    Strong 6.2 Quake, Multiple Aftershocks, Jolt Parts Of Yukon And Northwest B.C.

    Strong 6.2 Quake, Multiple Aftershocks, Jolt Parts Of Yukon And Northwest B.C.
    WHITEHORSE — Dozens of aftershocks rattled parts of southern Yukon and northern British Columbia after a strong earthquake shook the area Monday morning.

    Strong 6.2 Quake, Multiple Aftershocks, Jolt Parts Of Yukon And Northwest B.C.

    2 Alberta Men Died In Tofino Fish Boat Sinking Off B.C.'s West Coast: RCMP

    2 Alberta Men Died In Tofino Fish Boat Sinking Off B.C.'s West Coast: RCMP
    The Mounties say the men are 32 and 42 years old, but their names and hometowns haven't yet be released.

    2 Alberta Men Died In Tofino Fish Boat Sinking Off B.C.'s West Coast: RCMP

    Promises On Jobs, Affordability Continue To Dominate B.C. Election Campaign

    Promises On Jobs, Affordability Continue To Dominate B.C. Election Campaign
    VANCOUVER — With just over a week left in British Columbia's election campaign, the leaders spent Sunday out on the hustings trying to shore up votes.

    Promises On Jobs, Affordability Continue To Dominate B.C. Election Campaign

    B.C. Liberals To Repeal Vancouver Natural Gas Ban That City Says Doesn't Exist

    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Liberals say they will repeal a City of Vancouver plan the party claims prohibits natural gas in some new buildings, but the city says no such ban exists.

    B.C. Liberals To Repeal Vancouver Natural Gas Ban That City Says Doesn't Exist

    Small Plane With Two Aboard Crashes In Northern Quebec Near Schefferville

    MONTREAL — Police say two people may have perished after a small plane crashed in northern Quebec.

    Small Plane With Two Aboard Crashes In Northern Quebec Near Schefferville