Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Second Arrest Made In Toronto Playground Shooting Case: Police

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Aug, 2018 12:30 PM
    TORONTO — A second man has been charged in connection with a brazen daylight shooting at a Toronto playground that wounded two young sisters earlier this summer, police said Thursday.
     
     
    Tarrick Rhoden, of no fixed address, faces 17 charges, including attempted murder, two counts of aggravated assault and two counts of unauthorized possession of a firearm in a motor vehicle.
     
     
    The 23-year-old was arrested by provincial police on Wednesday in Algonquin Highlands, about around 275 kilometres northeast of Toronto, police said.
     
     
    Rhoden was wanted on a Canada-wide warrant along with 23-year-old T'Quan Robertson, who is still being sought on several charges, including attempted murder and assault.
     
     
    "T'Quan Robertson is encouraged to surrender," police said in a statement Thursday.
     
     
    During the search for the two suspects, police said they believed the men were being helped by friends or acquaintances to evade arrest.
     
     
    Investigators said 59-year-old Vern McPhail, of Brampton, Ont., was also arrested Wednesday and charged with accessory to commit an indictable offence.
     
     
    Police previously arrested 21-year-old Sheldon Eriya, of Markham, Ont., alleging he drove the vehicle in which the shooting suspects fled the area.
     
     
    The June 14 playground shooting was one in a string of high-profile gun crimes in recent months that prompted increased calls for action to deal with gun violence in the city.
     
     
    Investigators said there were 16 children at the east-end playground when two men got out of a truck and opened fire. At least 10 rounds were fired and the intended target fled the area, police said.
     
     
    The two injured girls, aged five and nine years old, underwent several surgeries. The five-year-old was shot in her abdomen while the nine-year-old was shot above her ankle.
     
     
    In July, Toronto police announced the force was adding 200 frontline officers to the night shift for the summer.
     
     
    About a month after the playground incident, the girls' mother spoke out, calling for better education and community support programs, not increased police presence, to curb gun violence in the city.
     
     
    Toronto must reduce the number of young people who turn to crime, Stacey King said at a meeting of the city's board of health where ongoing research into community violence was being discussed.
     
     
    She suggested children should be taught about issues that lie at the root of gun violence, including bullying and mental health.
     
     
    "We have to have more mentorship programs, we have to have more resources, we have to have more jobs for youth, we have to have more trades for them,'' she said. "For (people) to say they want more cops, this is not going to put a stop to it.''
     
     
    City police data shows the force had documented 262 shootings this year as of Monday, compared to 246 by the same date in 2017. The figures also show that as of Monday, there had been 32 shooting homicides in the city this year, compared to 24 in the same time period last year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead Inside West Kelowna Hotel

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead Inside West Kelowna Hotel
    RCMP arrived at the hotel Sunday evening after being notified that a woman might need assistance and officers found the woman's body. 

    Man Arrested After Woman Found Dead Inside West Kelowna Hotel

    Halifax Shop’s 'Kinky Trump' Pride Week Doughnut Is A Mouthful

    Halifax Shop’s 'Kinky Trump' Pride Week Doughnut Is A Mouthful
    U.S. President Donald Trump — or at least a culinary version of him — may be rendered speechless after a Halifax-based doughnut shop released a new creation to celebrate Pride Week.

    Halifax Shop’s 'Kinky Trump' Pride Week Doughnut Is A Mouthful

    Man Extradited From South Korea To Face Trial For 2006 Slaying In Burnaby, B.C.

     A 12-year search has ended for British Columbia's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team with the capture and extradition of a man wanted for a January 2006 slaying in Burnaby.

    Man Extradited From South Korea To Face Trial For 2006 Slaying In Burnaby, B.C.

    Lightning, Wind Could Undo Weekend Progress Battling B.C. Wildfires

    Lightning, Wind Could Undo Weekend Progress Battling B.C. Wildfires
    Officials in British Columbia's southern Interior say the warm temperatures and gusty winds in the forecast could spell the end of two days of relief from wildfires raging in the area.

    Lightning, Wind Could Undo Weekend Progress Battling B.C. Wildfires

    Five Members Of Alberta Family Hurt In Crash On B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway

    Five Members Of Alberta Family Hurt In Crash On B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway

    MERRITT, B.C. — Five members of an Alberta family have been injured in a crash in British C...

    Five Members Of Alberta Family Hurt In Crash On B.C.'s Coquihalla Highway

    Abbotsford, B.C., Man Sukhpreet Grewal Found Dead In His Home

    Abbotsford, B.C., Man Sukhpreet Grewal Found Dead In His Home
    A missing persons investigation that began early Friday afternoon in Abbotsford, B.C., ended with the man's body found in his home.

    Abbotsford, B.C., Man Sukhpreet Grewal Found Dead In His Home