Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police, court documents reveal more details behind Edmonton mass murder-suicide

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jan, 2015 05:42 PM
  • Police, court documents reveal more details behind Edmonton mass murder-suicide

EDMONTON — What was it that made Phu Lam so angry that he killed eight people?

The Edmonton maintenance man had been accused two years ago of abusing his wife and lashing out when he realized their eight-year-old son wasn't his biological offspring. He shot them both Sunday, along with other members of his wife's family, including a three-year-old niece. Yet he spared two other children who had also been in the north-side home — his toddler daughter and an infant nephew.

Lam dropped the two kids off at a relative's home the next day, then visited with other family before driving to another house to kill one last target. When that person wasn't at home, he shot dead an innocent woman who happened to be there.

Police revealed the details Friday and said they are still working to piece together the complex case and explain what turned 53-year-old Lam into a cold-blooded killer. All they can say for now is that it involved domestic troubles.

Court documents show Thuy Tien Truong, 35, had tried to escape her marriage to Lam before.

He had emigrated from Vietnam in 1979 and was visiting his home country when he met Truong in a coffee shop in 2000. They married six months later and she came to Canada in 2003.

Truong said in a 2012 application for an emergency protection order that her husband became controlling shortly after she landed here. Lam changed her phone number because he didn't want her to have friends. He wanted to choose her clothes. He didn't want her to work, but she got a job anyway.

Then he hit her. Once, he choked her so hard she thought she was going to die, she said. He threatened to kill her if she called police.

Truong said in the document that she was so unhappy she had sex once with another man. Lam became suspicious and a DNA test proved that their son, Elvis, was not his.

Lam planned "to actually kill off her whole family and he was going to look for a gun, but no one would sell it to him," a court interpreter said while translating Truong's testimony during an emergency protection hearing.

"He asked his ex-wife if she could find him a gun ... but the ex-wife told him not to do it because he has two kids with his ex-wife too."

The protection order was granted. It was revoked two months later when Truong failed to show up at court. Criminal charges against Lam — assault, sexual assault and uttering threats — were stayed. Prosecutors have said she and other witnesses recanted their stories.

The couple eventually had another child, but other court documents filed when Lam declared bankruptcy indicate they separated as early as February 2013. Police said they were trying to determine if Lam and Truong were still living together. Lam was listed as the owner of the home and police said he probably had a key.

Acting deputy chief Mark Neufeld told reporters Friday that autopsies confirmed that all eight victims were shot to death, but he refused to give further details.

He said investigators have received valuable help from the Vietnamese community, but added they may never fully understand why Lam exploded to violently.

"We struggle to try to put some sense to something like this," Neufeld said.

"We will chase down everything we can to try to find out the reasons why, because I think it's important.

"But at the end of the day you try to import rational thought into an irrational act and, a lot of times, it just never comes."

MORE National ARTICLES

More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley

More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley
VANCOUVER — Officials with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency are expected to release more details on an avian flu virus that has forced the quarantine of four poulty farms in British Columbia's Fraser Valley.

More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley

RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges

RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges
The RCMP alleges the teenager had committed a robbery at the direction of and for the benefit of an unspecified terrorist organization.

RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges

Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed

Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed
TORONTO — An Ontario court has dismissed an appeal by the federal government that sought to quash a class action lawsuit which claims a devastating loss of cultural identity was suffered by Ontario children caught in the so-called "60s scoop."

Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed

Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?

Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?
The Conservative government has been under fire in recent weeks for a growing backlog of 11,000 social security cases, most involving ailing or injured Canadians denied Canada Pension Plan disability benefits and waiting for their appeals to be heard.

Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?

Senators challenge name, need for Tories' new bill on cultural practices

Senators challenge name, need for Tories' new bill on cultural practices
OTTAWA — The need for and even the name of a new Conservative bill aimed at barring polygamous and forced marriages came under criticism Thursday in the Senate.

Senators challenge name, need for Tories' new bill on cultural practices

Today on the Hill: Melnyk patches things up with Alfie by hiring him

Today on the Hill: Melnyk patches things up with Alfie by hiring him
Ottawa Senators owner Eugene Melnyk and Daniel Alfredsson are expected to sit down to a news conference — together — along with Sens general manager Bryan Murray.

Today on the Hill: Melnyk patches things up with Alfie by hiring him