Close X
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Man In Alleged Halifax Shooting Plot Never Spoke Of Guns: Friend

The Canadian Press, 15 Feb, 2015 12:30 PM
    HALIFAX — A man who went to rock shows with one of the young men alleged to have been planning a Valentine's Day shooting on a Halifax mall says his acquaintance never spoke of guns to him.
     
    Call centre worker Vincent Appleton said he was friends with Randall Steven Shepherd, 20, who was charged Saturday with conspiracy to commit murder.
     
    He never mentioned firearms, said Appleton.  
     
    "It throws you back a little bit. It gives you pause," said the 35-year-old, who had planned to spend Saturday morning at the Halifax Shopping Centre, where police allege the attack was to take place.
     
    Lindsay Kantha Souvannarath, 23, of Geneva, Ill., has also been charged with conspiracy to commit murder. And police found a 19-year-old suspect dead in a house in suburban Timberlea on Friday.
     
    The identity of the deceased suspect has not been released by police, but some published reports have put a name to the 19-year-old.
     
    Appleton said he was friends with the young person named in those reports, as well as Shepherd, and that he went to rock shows with them and had them over for a few beers at his apartment.
     
    A social networking website believed to be linked to the deceased 19-year-old features pictures of weapons, Nazi symbols and images relating to the Columbine school shooting. Other pictures on the social media site show the young man posing with a rifle and a knife.
     
    On Feb. 5, an image circulated on another account featuring the 19-year-old's username and the phrase: "Valentine's Day it's going down."
     
    Appleton said Shepherd had appeared to him to be a "happy guy," who was "rocking out his hair at the bar."
     
    Cindy Greenwood, a neighbour a few doors from the home where the young man's body was found, said she knows Shepherd's parents at the local Seventh Day Adventist Church.
     
    "This is really shocking. ... The parents are good people. They attend church. It's a nice family. I'm not sure what they even know of this so far," she said.
     
    Meanwhile, police in Geneva, just west of Chicago, say they searched Souvannarath's home Friday night and seized several items.
     
    A former neighbour, Eva Schooley, moved into the same cul-de-sac a few months after the Souvannaraths in 2000 and lived across from them for about a decade, the Associated Press reported Saturday. She recalled them as "very nice people" and said they participated in frequent block parties, Easter egg hunts and Halloween parties.
     
    "My granddaughters ran around with Lindsay," she told AP. "Lindsay was a little strange. I think at one point she went kind of gothic on us for a while. She liked to dress in black, the whole gothic style."
     
    Police said Souvannarath and Shepherd will be in court Tuesday to face the charges. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    John Baird to resign as foreign affairs minister and not run again

    John Baird to resign as foreign affairs minister and not run again
    OTTAWA — John Baird, one of Prime Minister Stephen Harper's most trusted and high-profile cabinet ministers, is resigning his foreign affairs post and will not seek re-election later this year.

    John Baird to resign as foreign affairs minister and not run again

    Canada joining group to better assist Ukraine's armed forces, Nicholson says

    Canada joining group to better assist Ukraine's armed forces, Nicholson says
    OTTAWA — Defence Minister Rob Nicholson says Canada is joining the US-Ukraine Joint Commission on Defence Reform and Bilateral Co-operation.

    Canada joining group to better assist Ukraine's armed forces, Nicholson says

    Edward Snowden speaks to Toronto students, urges caution on new terror bill

    TORONTO — Former U.S. intelligence contractor turned whistleblower Edward Snowden says citizens of the world, including Canadians, should be "extraordinarily cautious" when their governments try to pass new laws under the guise of an increased threat of terrorism.

    Edward Snowden speaks to Toronto students, urges caution on new terror bill

    Train derailment plot 'very simple idea,' Via Rail terror trial hears

    Train derailment plot 'very simple idea,' Via Rail terror trial hears
    TORONTO — A plan to derail a train travelling between Canada and the U.S. was a "very simple" idea that would kill scores of people and pave the way for more acts of terrorism, the trial of two men accused in the alleged plot heard Tuesday.

    Train derailment plot 'very simple idea,' Via Rail terror trial hears

    Oil price plunge causes mixed results for East Coast workers, industries

    Oil price plunge causes mixed results for East Coast workers, industries
    SYDNEY, N.S. — John Gnatiuk has been using his earnings from Alberta's oilpatch to renovate his home in Sydney, N.S., and support local businesses in Cape Breton's ailing economy.

    Oil price plunge causes mixed results for East Coast workers, industries

    Malaysia's civil aviation chief makes recommendations to ICAO safety meeting

    Malaysia's civil aviation chief makes recommendations to ICAO safety meeting
    MONTREAL — Malaysia's civil aviation chief has used a high-level international safety conference in Montreal to call for change after two unprecedented tragedies involving his country's major airline last year.

    Malaysia's civil aviation chief makes recommendations to ICAO safety meeting