Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Witness Video Appears To Show Aftermath Of RCMP Shooting In Dawson Creek Outside BC Hydro Hearing

The Canadian Press, 17 Jul, 2015 06:37 PM
    DAWSON CREEK, B.C. — Witness video has emerged and appears to show the aftermath of a fatal RCMP shooting outside a public hearing for the contentious Site C dam in Dawson Creek, B.C.
     
    In the video posted on Facebook, two officers with their guns drawn are standing over a man in a grey hoodie while he is slumped on the ground.
     
    "The cops just ... shot this guy," says a man in a profanity-filled narrative as he records the video. "He's ... dead. There's blood everywhere."
     
    The video appears to have been taken on a cell phone from a room in the Stonebridge Hotel overlooking the Fixx Urban Grill restaurant where a BC Hydro public information session took place.
     
    One officer appears to kick something away from the man although the object cannot be seen. The man moves slightly on the ground before becoming still as blood pools beneath him.
     
    Sirens can be heard in the background as a third Mountie arrives. One of the officers appears to bring the man's hands behind his back to handcuff him. 
     
    Police appear to check his vital signs before opening the trunk of a cruiser and starting to administer first aid about two minutes into the video.
     
    Several other officers eventually appear. One crouches near a cruiser with a long gun just before the video ends.
     
    British Columbia's police watchdog, the Independent Investigations Office, has begun investigating the shooting but has provided few details.
     
    IIO spokeswoman Kellie Kilpatrick said Dawson Creek RCMP responded around 6:30 p.m. Thursday to a report of a man creating a disturbance and destroying property.
     
    "The individual was escorted from the event and subsequently came into contact with police just outside," she said. "Our information from police is that he was non-compliant with their directions and an altercation took place and he was shot."
     
     
    A six-member team flew to Dawson Creek on Friday morning. Kilpatrick said a forensic specialist was to take over the scene while investigators spoke with witnesses and secured any video.
     
    Kilpatrick said it was early in the investigation and she had no further details on the confrontation between the man and police, including whether he was armed.
     
    She said the IIO would not identify the officers and that the BC Coroners Service would release the dead man's name. 
     
    BC Hydro refused to comment Friday and referred all questions to the RCMP.
     
    Mounties have said they encountered a man wearing a mask outside the venue and believed he was connected to the call about a disturbance and destruction of property.
     
    Despite attempts to de-escalate the situation, there was a confrontation and the unidentified man was shot and later died in hospital, RCMP said.
     
    The meeting in Dawson Creek was the last of five public consultations on the Site C dam held in the province this month.
     
    The hearings have attracted dissent. A YouTube video shows a small band of Treaty 8 First Nations protesters interrupted a July 9 hearing in Fort St. John with a drum procession and speeches.
     
    The province granted approval earlier this month for the first phase of construction to start on the $9-billion dam on the Peace River.
     
    Several First Nations and environmental groups have filed lawsuits to try to stop construction and the actions are currently working their way through the courts.
     
    Mike Bernier, who represents the Peace River South riding for the Liberals in the B.C. legislature, said it was still unclear whether the police confrontation was connected to the Site C hearing.
     
     
    "Any time there's a loss of life, regardless of the circumstances, it's very unfortunate and my thoughts and prayers go out to everybody involved: the RCMP, the family of the deceased, everyone," he said.
     
    "It's obviously a troubling situation."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Men In Hospital After Fire In Courtenay Home Where Neighbours Heard Explosions

    Men In Hospital After Fire In Courtenay Home Where Neighbours Heard Explosions
    COURTENAY, B.C. — Three men are in hospital with life-threatening injuries after a house fire in a Courtenay, B.C., home where neighbours heard explosions.

    Men In Hospital After Fire In Courtenay Home Where Neighbours Heard Explosions

    Driverless Trucks Hauling Cargo To Mexico? Group Hopes To Make It Reality

    Driverless Trucks Hauling Cargo To Mexico? Group Hopes To Make It Reality
    REGINA — Trucks hauling cargo from Canada through the United States to Mexico and back navigate border crossings without the need for passports, visas or even a driver to steer them.

    Driverless Trucks Hauling Cargo To Mexico? Group Hopes To Make It Reality

    Quebec Bingo Industry Losing Profits Due To Aging Clientele And Competition

    Quebec Bingo Industry Losing Profits Due To Aging Clientele And Competition
    MONTREAL — Jean-Marc Crete sits attentively on his platform, mic in left hand, the potential winning ball freshly released from a constantly buzzing machine that provides the soundtrack to the Montreal bingo game.

    Quebec Bingo Industry Losing Profits Due To Aging Clientele And Competition

    Stores In Montreal Tourist Areas Can Stay Open 24 Hours Beginning Monday

    Stores In Montreal Tourist Areas Can Stay Open 24 Hours Beginning Monday
    MONTREAL — Visitors to Montreal will be able to shop around the clock thanks to a new designation that will allow stores to stay open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

    Stores In Montreal Tourist Areas Can Stay Open 24 Hours Beginning Monday

    Fire Limits Ability Of Investigators To Reach Scene Of Alberta Plane Crash

    Fire Limits Ability Of Investigators To Reach Scene Of Alberta Plane Crash
    COLD LAKE, Alta. — Police say wildfire conditions at the scene of the crash of a firefighting plane in northern Alberta are making it difficult for investigators to reach the site.

    Fire Limits Ability Of Investigators To Reach Scene Of Alberta Plane Crash

    Rachel Notley Becomes Premier: Alberta Ndp Cabinet To Be Sworn In Today

    Rachel Notley Becomes Premier: Alberta Ndp Cabinet To Be Sworn In Today
    EDMONTON — New Democrat Rachel Notley becomes Alberta premier today when she and her cabinet are sworn in on the grounds of the legislature in Edmonton.

    Rachel Notley Becomes Premier: Alberta Ndp Cabinet To Be Sworn In Today