Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Two injured in possible road-rage shooting near busy downtown Toronto intersection

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2023 09:54 AM
  • Two injured in possible road-rage shooting near busy downtown Toronto intersection

A shooting in downtown Toronto that sent two people to hospital with serious injuries Monday morning could be the result of road rage following street racing, police said as they worked to identify those responsible.

Toronto police said they were called to 7 Charles Street West, just one block south of Toronto's busy Yonge and Bloor intersection, just after 6 a.m. for what they described as a drive-by shooting.

Duty Insp. Michelle Olszevski said officers arrived to find a man and a woman in their 20s suffering from gunshot wounds. They were taken to nearby trauma centres where they were in serious, but non-life-threatening condition hours later.

Before the shooting, police got a call about stunt driving taking place on Yonge Street shortly before 6 a.m., Olszevski said.

"The vehicles and occupants of the vehicles involved in this stunt driving call were also in front of 7 Charles Street at the time of this shooting," she said. 

"There is a possibility that this incident has occurred as a result of a road rage."

Aiman Fatima, who lives with her family in a condo building near the scene, said she left the building for a morning walk around 6 a.m. Monday and saw a group of ten to twelve people, mostly in their 20s, speaking with each other.

She said she didn't notice any aggressive behaviour from the group. A minute later, she walked by and was about to turn on Yonge Street when she heard what she said were 12 to 14 gunshots. 

She said she ran away without looking back, and saw others doing the same. 

"I was very scared," she said while standing outside a police barricade set up around the scene. 

“Everyone just ran away to save themselves, I didn’t look back,” she added. “I ran away on the opposite side.”

Two single women's shoes could be seen in the middle of the crime scene. A Forensic Identification Services truck was also on scene.

Fatima said she started going on morning walks around two weeks ago, but she may stop due to safety concerns. She called for more security measures in the area such as additional surveillance cameras.

Lindsay Turchin, who lives in an apartment overlooking the scene, said her partner witnessed people running away. She said there has been crime, particularly stabbings, in the area before but this is the first time she's experienced a shooting so close by.

"A lot of us heard gunshots," she said through tears. "One or two, I thought 'car backfiring,' and then it just kept going. I lost count."

John Wimbs, who lives six blocks away from the scene, said he still feels safe walking on the streets, and a number of recent shootings and stabbings aren't very worrying for him.

“When you see these things happening, I mean this is not new to Toronto," he said as he walked by the scene of the shooting. "I have lived here for many years, you know, there has been violence but it just feels there is more of it."

Olszevski said police are searching for a Black SUV last seen travelling westbound from the scene to Bay Street, where it turned and travelled north. Police did not yet have a description of the suspect or suspects.

“(The victims) may have been involved in the stunt driving incident as well but that’s still being actively investigated," she said.

She appealed for any witnesses or anyone with information or video footage of the shooting or SUV to come forward to police

MORE National ARTICLES

Shots fired in Port Coquitlam

Shots fired in Port Coquitlam
On Tuesday, at 1:44 am, Coquitlam RCMP received multiple reports of shots being fired in the 2000-block of Shaughnessy Place, Port Coquitlam. Officers immediately responded and located the victim residence. No one was physically injured during the incident. 

Shots fired in Port Coquitlam

BC port strike vote

BC port strike vote
Both the union and the Maritime Employers Association -- which represents 49 private-sector employers at more than 30 B-C ports -- have agreed that June 24th is the earliest any job action could occur.

BC port strike vote

Eyes on the weather as fierce wildfire rages, forces evacuations in northeastern B.C.

Eyes on the weather as fierce wildfire rages, forces evacuations in northeastern B.C.
The extreme fire activity prompted the District of Tumbler Ridge to skip an evacuation alert Thursday and jump right to an order requiring all 2,400 residents to get out immediately and seek refuge in Dawson Creek or Fort St. John.  

Eyes on the weather as fierce wildfire rages, forces evacuations in northeastern B.C.

'These are the rules': Canada to deport Sikh family to India

'These are the rules': Canada to deport Sikh family to India
Hardeep Singh Chahal, his pregnant wife Kamaldeep Kaur and their three-year-old daughter, who live in Penticton, were given deportation orders last month for reasons withheld for privacy reasons, the Houston Today newspaper reported.

'These are the rules': Canada to deport Sikh family to India

Canada invites 4,800 candidates for Express Entry draw in June

Canada invites 4,800 candidates for Express Entry draw in June
The 14th draw of the country's flagship economic immigration management system on Thursday follows the most recent draw on May 24 in which 4,800 candidates with a minimum CRS score of 488 were invited.

Canada invites 4,800 candidates for Express Entry draw in June

Jobless at 5.2 per cent: Statistics Canada

Jobless at 5.2 per cent: Statistics Canada
The jobless rate rose to 5.2 per cent in May, ending a streak of eight months of job gains. T-D director of economics James Orlando says the question now is whether this is a one-off, or the start of a trend.  

Jobless at 5.2 per cent: Statistics Canada