Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parents Of Man Linked To Alleged Shooting Plot Want Answers In Son's Death

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Oct, 2015 11:13 AM
    HALIFAX — The parents of a young man connected to an alleged mass-murder plot in Halifax say they want answers from police about the night their son died.
     
    Police say James Lee Gamble, 19, killed himself in his family's home in the suburb of Timberlea on Feb. 13 as investigators were unravelling an alleged plot by Gamble and two other people to shoot and kill people at a Halifax mall the next day.
     
    In an interview with CTV Wednesday, parents John Lee Gamble and Patricia Cody said they were out running errands on the wintry evening that officers surrounded their home, and learned about the allegations involving James at the local police detachment — where they begged to be allowed to speak to him.
     
    "John was saying he wanted to go home: 'Just let me go home, I'll talk to him, I'll talk him out,'" Cody told CTV. "'Let me call him, let me go home.' And they wouldn't let us."
     
    Cody and Gamble declined an interview with the Canadian Press.
     
    Cody said she wonders if her son was driven to suicide after waiting fruitlessly to speak to his parents.
     
    She said he knew they were coming home and wonders if he was waiting for them and thought he had been abandoned by them.
     
    The couple also took issue with the four hours that police waited to enter the home after hearing a gunshot, saying there may have been an opportunity to save James's life.
     
    A childhood friend of Gamble's, Randall Steven Shepherd, is currently awaiting a trial on a charge of conspiracy to commit murder related to the alleged plot. Lindsay Kantha Souvannarath, 23, of Geneva, Illinois, is facing the same charge. 
     
    Gamble and Cody say they've asked many questions to many members of the RCMP about the way events unfolded the night their son died and have been frustrated by the response.
     
    An RCMP spokesperson told CTV the situation that night was "fluid," and the family has been given as much information as possible given the ongoing investigation and court case.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Lags In Protecting Sensitive Health Data: Privacy Commissioner

    Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham says authorities are not legally obligated to report privacy breaches, which could involve sensitive personal information from HIV tests, to mammograms or routine blood results.

    B.C. Lags In Protecting Sensitive Health Data: Privacy Commissioner

    Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat

    Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat
    The Immigration and Refugee Board told 32-year-old Yahya Samatar at a hearing in Winnipeg today that his claim was accepted.

    Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat

    Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction

    Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction
    The Ontario Provincial Police have dropped an investigation into the RCMP's destruction of gun registry data, saying the alleged offences no longer exist under a back-dated, retroactive Conservative law passed last spring.

    Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction

    Families First: Minister Lisa Raitt Urges Airlines To Stop Separating Parents, Children

     Canada's transport minister quietly wrote to the heads of every major airline in the country earlier this year to try and stamp out a practice where parents were being seated separately from their children on flights.

    Families First: Minister Lisa Raitt Urges Airlines To Stop Separating Parents, Children

    Statistics Canada says gross domestic product grew by 0.3 per cent in July

    OTTAWA — Looking to shake off its slump, the Canadian economy grew for a second consecutive month in July, helped by a continuing rebound in the oilsands following slowdowns related to maintenance and forest fires.

    Statistics Canada says gross domestic product grew by 0.3 per cent in July

    Guy Turcotte's murder trial loses a juror; and then there were 11

    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — The trial of a former Quebec doctor who is charged with murdering his children has lost a juror.

    Guy Turcotte's murder trial loses a juror; and then there were 11