Suspect in Canada stabbing spree dies soon after arrest
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[September 08, 2022]
By Anna Mehler Paperny and Steve Scherer
TORONTO (Reuters) -The suspect sought by
Canadian authorities in a weekend stabbing spree that killed 10 people
in and around an indigenous reserve was arrested on Wednesday, then
lapsed into unexplained "medical distress" and died soon after at a
hospital, police said.
Official word that the intense four-day manhunt for Myles Sanderson, 30,
ended with his death came during a late-night news conference hours
after the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) reported he had been
taken into custody.
Sanderson's demise clouded prospects of investigators ever clearly
determining a motive for Sunday's deadly attacks, one of the bloodiest
acts of mass violence in the country's history.
His older brother and accused accomplice, Damien Sanderson, 31, was
found slain on Monday in a grassy area of the James Smith Cree Nation
reserve in central Saskatchewan.
Police said they were still investigating whether the younger sibling
might have killed his brother in the aftermath of the stabbing rampage,
which took place in the reserve and the nearby village of Weldon, about
320 km (200 miles) north of the provincial capital of Regina.
Myles Sanderson was arrested near the town of Rosthern, roughly midway
between Weldon and Saskatchewan's largest city, Saskatoon, after a
resident of an adjacent town reported spotting him with a knife
attempting to break in. He then sped off in a stolen pickup truck,
according to the RCMP.
RCMP Assistant Commissioner Rhonda Blackmore told reporters police
catching up with Sanderson forced his truck off the road into a ditch
and surrounded the vehicle before taking the suspect into custody and
seizing a knife from inside the pickup.
But Sanderson "went into medical distress" soon after he was detained,
Blackmore said. He was attended to by emergency personnel on the scene
and was taken by ambulance to a hospital where he was pronounced dead a
short time later, she said.
Canada's Global News agency, citing multiple law enforcement sources,
reported that Sanderson had died of unspecified injuries that
authorities believed were self-inflicted.
Blackmore gave no details about the Sanderson's medical episode and
declined to address questions about whether he might have ingested a
drug or other substance that killed him, saying an autopsy would
determine the manner and cause of his death.
She said investigators believe he had sustained an injury requiring
medical attention either during Sunday's attacks or just afterward,
based on his theft of a first-aid kit from another vehicle. Blackmore
said an emergency-911 caller who reported spotting the suspect on
Wednesday also described him as appearing to have an injury.
In addition to the 10 victims killed on Sunday, 18 others were wounded
in the rampage, which unnerved a country where instances of mass murder
are rare. Police said some of the victims appeared to have been
targeted, while others were apparently random.
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Friends and relatives of Bonnie Burns,
who was killed on Sunday at James Smith Cree Nation, comfort one
another at a news conference in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada,
September 7, 2022. REUTERS/Valerie Zink
Authorities have offered no explanation for what may have sparked
the attacks.
With Myles Sanderson's death, "We may never have an understanding of
that motivation," Blackmore said.
His arrest came hours after new details about the victims and the
circumstances of their deaths were brought to light by relatives.
During an emotional news conference on Wednesday, Saskatoon Tribal
Council Chief Mark Arcand revealed his sister, Bonnie Burns, 48, and
his 28-year-old nephew, Gregory Burns, were stabbed to death in
their front yard on the James Smith Cree reserve early on Sunday
morning.
Burns' other three sons and two foster children were also home at
the time of the attacks.
"She was protecting her son. She was protecting these three little
boys. This is why she's a hero. She's a true matriarch," Arcand said
of his slain sister.
Thirteen-year-old Dayson Burns was stabbed in the neck but survived,
and another young boy in the home hid behind a high chair watching
the violence unfold, Arcand said.
"During this difficult time we are just climbing a mountain ... and
that mountain is the devastation of what happened to our family
member," Arcand told reporters.
Some First Nation leaders have linked the killings to drug use, but
police have not cited drugs or alcohol as factors. A member of the
James Smith Cree, Ivor Wayne Burns, said the Sanderson brothers
belonged to First Nation communities.
Ten of the wounded were still hospitalized as of Tuesday afternoon,
seven in stable condition and three critical, health authorities
said.
Myles Sanderson had been wanted as a fugitive since May when he
stopped meeting his parole officer after serving time for assault,
robbery and other offenses. He had amassed a criminal record of 59
convictions over two decades, according to parole documents reviewed
by Reuters.
Minister of Public Safety Marco Mendicino promised an inquiry into
the decision to release Sanderson on parole.
Chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous
Nations, said in a statement on Wednesday night that the communities
traumatized by Sunday's violence can at least "now take comfort that
Mr. Sanderson is no longer a risk to their safety."
(Reporting by Anna Mehler-Paperny in Toronto and Steve Scherer in
Vancouver; Additional reporting by Ismail Shakil in Ottawa, and
Doina Chiacu, Kanishka Singh and Rami Ayyub in Washington; Writing
by Steve Gorman; Editing by Deepa Babington, Lincoln Feast and Kim
Coghill)
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