SIU investigating after police shoot man dead in Toronto! Or Especial Impunity Unit!! “Guaranteeing immunity and
tribute to the police by other execution with a style of murderers” News does not
just happen but is:
…
the product of judgements concerning the social relevance of given events and
situations based on assumptions concerning their interest and importance. The “reality”
it portrays is always in at least one sense fundamentally biased, simply in
virtue of the inescapable decision to designate an issue or event newsworthy
and then to construct an account of it in a specific framework of interpretation.
(Schlesinger,
1978: 165)
By: Wendy
Gillis News reporter, Published on Thu Mar 17 2016 It
could be months or longer before officials reveal whether the
North York man fatally shot by Toronto police Sunday night was carrying a
weapon the night he died.
By: Wendy Gillis News
reporter, Published on Fri Mar 18 2016 Man killed by Toronto cops held real or replica
gun, says police source
Man killed by Toronto cops held real or replica gun, says police source
Officers negotiated with Alex Wettlaufer for at least 15 minutes before firing their weapons, a police source has told the Star.
Toronto police officers from the force’s
tactical unit negotiated with Alex Wettlaufer for at least 15 minutes
before firing their weapons, killing the young man who a police source says was armed with either a real or replica gun.
Wettlaufer, 21, died after three Toronto
police officers fired their weapons late Sunday night in a darkened
ravine in a North York park near the Leslie subway station.
The man’s grieving family has said Wettlaufer was not armed at the time of the shooting, and was holding his cellphone and speaking to his mother in the moments right before he was shot.
But a police source with knowledge of the
investigation says Wettlaufer was carrying a gun, though it is not yet
clear if it was real or a replica.
The source spoke on the condition of anonymity
because the investigation into the fatal shooting has been taken over
by the province’s Special Investigations Unit, the civilian agency that
probes deaths involving police. Police are legally not allowed to
release information about the incident while the SIU is investigating.
The SIU, meanwhile, says it cannot confirm
that Wettlaufer was armed because the investigation is ongoing.
Information about whether the young man was armed may not be provided
until the probe is completed, a process that typically takes several
months or up to a year.
Toronto officers were first called around
11:15 p.m. after reports of a fight between two men at the Leslie subway
station, near Leslie St. and Sheppard Ave. E. Toronto police tweeted at
the time that one of them had a gun.
According to investigators, one of the men
fled to the park across the street, where there was a confrontation with
Toronto police. Soon after, members of the Emergency Task Force (ETF), a
specially trained tactical unit called in for critical situations
including when someone is armed, arrived to begin negotiations with
Wettlaufer.
ETF officers are trained in negotiation, and
generally, a negotiator will wear a recording device to capture audio,
though it’s not clear if that occurred in this case.
The police source said the officers attempted
for at least 15 minutes to speak with Wettlaufer — “an ongoing,
prolonged negotiation.” Three officers then fired their weapons, though
officials have not yet released how many times Wettlaufer was shot.
Court documents show Wettlaufer was facing
three criminal charges at the time of his death, dating back to an
October 2014 incident. Alongside three other accused, Wettlaufer faced
one of robbery for allegedly stealing a cellphone and one count of
assault causing bodily harm, for allegedly attacking two people.
Wettlaufer alone was charged with the
unauthorized possession of a knife that opens through the use of
centrifugal force — a weapon that requires a licence.
All of the charges against Wettlaufer were before the court at the time of his death.
With files from Chris Reynolds
In 2010 Toronto received $1,000,000,000 to build up the Police State,
and enforced a Public Works Protection Act on the citizens of Toronto
which was originally used to protect government buildings from russian
and german spies, so make sure you have Z Papers on you at all times for
the blue shirts.
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