Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Gunman Michael Zehaf Bibeau Hit Several Times Before Dying

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 25 Oct, 2014 12:08 AM
  • Ottawa Gunman Michael Zehaf Bibeau Hit Several Times Before Dying
OTTAWA - The gunman who charged into Parliament after shooting a Canadian Forces reservist was struck by nearly a dozen bullets from security officers and finally was brought down by Sergeant-at-Arms Kevin Vickers.
 
Several sources, who have requested anonymity, have confirmed to The Canadian Press that Michael Zehaf Bibeau was fatally wounded by Vickers near the door of the Parliamentary library.
 
Police have said that Vickers was involved in Wednesday's gunfight with Zehaf Bibeau.
 
Security video released by the RCMP on Thursday showed Zehaf Bibeau's deadly race from the National War Memorial after he shot Cpl. Nathan Cirillo and hijacked a ministerial car before bursting into the Parliament buildings.
 
He ran in to Parliament's Centre Block through the main entrance with RCMP officers in hot pursuit.
 
The RCMP is charged with assuring the security of the exterior of the Parliament buildings.
 
A security service source says the gunman was intercepted by a House of Commons security guard who unsuccessfully tried to wrestle his gun away from him.
 
The guard yelled "Gun!" to warn his colleagues and tried to yank the barrel of the weapon down but Zehaf Bibeau managed to fire, wounding the man.
 
The gunman then bolted several metres down the Hall of Honour with police and guards chasing him. Shots were fired.
 
Zehaf Bibeau, his body riddled with bullets, huddled behind a column by the Parliamentary library. It was there that Vickers fired the fatal shots.
 
The slaying of Cirillo was the second killing of a soldier this week.
 
On Monday, Warrant Officer Patrice Vincent, 53, was fatally injured when a man identified as Martin Rouleau used his vehicle to run him and a colleague down in a parking lot of a federal building south of Montreal.
 
Rouleau, 25, fled the scene but was later shot dead after a pursuit in which his car rolled over. Friends said he had become increasingly radicalized.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ex-Quebec doctor who killed his kids hopes to be released from custody

Ex-Quebec doctor who killed his kids hopes to be released from custody
A former Quebec doctor who stabbed his two children to death is hoping to be released from a psychiatric hospital before his new trial.

Ex-Quebec doctor who killed his kids hopes to be released from custody

Greenpeace says defamation lawsuit an attempt to muzzle

Greenpeace says defamation lawsuit an attempt to muzzle
An environmental group says a forestry company's lawsuit against it is an attempt to muzzle criticism.  

Greenpeace says defamation lawsuit an attempt to muzzle

Senators, not PM, should choose Senate Speaker, Liberal senator says

Senators, not PM, should choose Senate Speaker, Liberal senator says
Canada's Senate may never become an elected parliamentary chamber, but a move is afoot to bring at least a measure of democracy to the appointed upper house.

Senators, not PM, should choose Senate Speaker, Liberal senator says

Best polio vaccine? Oral and injectable, used in tandem, new study says

Best polio vaccine? Oral and injectable, used in tandem, new study says
For decades scientists have debated whether injectable or oral polio vaccine is the best option for trying to finish the job of eradicating polio. Now a new study offers an answer: both.

Best polio vaccine? Oral and injectable, used in tandem, new study says

RCMP arrest man after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island

RCMP arrest man after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island
The RCMP said Thursday they arrested a man after a father and his adult son were found dead in Prince Edward Island.

RCMP arrest man after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island

Police best suited to solve cases of missing, murdered women, says Harper

Police best suited to solve cases of missing, murdered women, says Harper
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says police investigations, not a national inquiry, are the best way to deal with crimes involving missing and murdered aboriginal women.

Police best suited to solve cases of missing, murdered women, says Harper