Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Kevin Vickers Talks About His Emotions After Parliament Hill Firefight

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2015 12:56 PM
    SACKVILLE, N.B. — The man credited with stopping a gunman in a firefight last year on Parliament Hill recalled the emotions he felt after the shooting in a convocation address Monday to university students.
     
    Kevin Vickers said he was in tears the morning after the shooting of Michael Zihaf Bibeau on Oct. 22.
     
    "That day was a blur to me," he told students at Mount Allison University in Sackville, N.B. 
     
    "I went home that night and I had a hard time going to sleep and I woke up at around 5:30 in the morning and I was crying. It was the loneliest moment of my life."
     
    Vickers, who was the House of Commons sergeant-at-arms at the time, has been credited with firing the shots that killed Bibeau. Soon after the shooting, Vickers was appointed Canada's ambassador to Ireland.
     
    On the day of the shooting, Vickers said he "bumped up against a moment in history" as he recounted what went through his mind in the Centre Block of the Parliament Buildings.
     
    "I found myself on one side of the pillar and a gunman on the other side of the pillar," he said.
     
    "There was a moment where I thought I'd just reach out and grab the gun. He shot and fired. And the moment he shot and fired, I dove through the air, landing on the floor just beneath him."
     
    Vickers is an Irish-Canadian from New Brunswick who had a lengthy career in the RCMP before joining the House of Commons security staff in 2005 and becoming sergeant-at-arms in 2006.
     
    After the shootings, Vickers said his mother called him on four straight days suggesting he come home to New Brunswick to see his family. It was then he realized she knew he needed to come home for his own state of mind.
     
    He reflected on the importance of mothers based on that experience, and how he felt when he got back to New Brunswick.
     
    "I was OK now, and it was all thanks to mom," he said.
     
    Vickers said he prayed for Bibeau, who stormed into the Centre Block after killing a soldier at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops
    MONTREAL — Classes in a building at a downtown Montreal university are cancelled for the day after students occupied it for several hours and ended up clashing with police.

    Classes Cancelled At Quebec University After Vandalism And Clashes With Cops

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies
    OTTAWA — Rogers Communications says it saw a sharp drop in the number of requests for customer information from government and police agencies last year — a result of swelling public concern and a landmark court ruling on telecommunications privacy.

    Rogers Sees Drop In Customer Info Requests From Police, Security Agencies

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information
    A U.S.-based sperm bank says it didn't verify the information of a donor that is at the heart of a lawsuit by a Canadian couple who allege they weren't told their donor was a schizophrenic with a criminal record.

    U.S. Sperm Bank Sued By Canadian Couple Says It Didn't Verify Donor Information

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay
    VANCOUVER — A fuel spill has spread over areas of Vancouver's English Bay, coating waters in an oily sheen.

    Crews Work To Contain Fuel Spill In Vancouver's English Bay

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source
    OTTAWA — The prime minister might have had his makeup done alongside Sen. Mike Duffy in 2010 on one of their many appearances together, but a government source says the taxpayer didn't pick up the tab for that type of service.

    Taxpayers Not Made To Foot The Bill For Harper Makeup Artist: Government Source

    Ontario Still Has Concerns About Prostitution Law Despite Constitutionality

    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says her government's review of Canada's new prostitution law may have found it to be constitutional, but it hasn't "entirely" alleviated her concerns about the law.

    Ontario Still Has Concerns About Prostitution Law Despite Constitutionality