'Her loss is immeasurable': Slain B.C. RCMP officer worked on Burnaby detachment's homeless outreach team

The_Foxer

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petros

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Well, at least they got rid of that Kennedy Stewart goof as Mayor in Vancouver. Correct me if wrong but didnt this happen in Stewart's former constituency as a Bby MLA?
 

bill barilko

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Well, at least they got rid of that Kennedy Stewart goof as Mayor in Vancouver. Correct me if wrong but didnt this happen in Stewart's former constituency as a Bby MLA?
Yes but that was years ago-Burnaby with all it's green space has been quite lucky in terms of avoiding the homeless encampment plague.

Last month one tent actually sprung up here in Kitsilano I happened by just as the dodgy looking 'owner' was leaving his pad; stupid fuck that he was it never lasted more than a few hours before the property owner moved in & tore it down this was just a few doors east of 4th & Burrard.

Anyway this cop being murdered is awful beyond belief so many people I know are so upset/inconsolable.
 

petros

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I met him in 2015. He was looking for advice on MS after his sister was diagnosed. It was a shock when he found out support doesn't exist.

He started on a good footing but was slappped into reality by the of corruption that runs Vancouver.

Had we not spoke at length, Id have a different opinion. He just doesnt have the spine to take a leadership role.

"Defunding police" to the tune of $5.7M was a fatal mistake.
 
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spaminator

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on a similar note, coverage of the innisfil funerals start at 9am edt. 👮‍♂️ :(
 

spaminator

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Two slain South Simcoe Police officers remembered at joint funeral
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Publishing date:Oct 20, 2022 • 15 hours ago • 4 minute read • Join the conversation
The casket of South Simcoe Police Service constable Morgan Russell is carried into a joint funeral service in Barrie Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022. Russell and fellow SSPS constable Devon Northrup were killed in a shooting in Innisfil. T
The casket of South Simcoe Police Service constable Morgan Russell is carried into a joint funeral service in Barrie Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022. Russell and fellow SSPS constable Devon Northrup were killed in a shooting in Innisfil. T PHOTO BY NATHAN DENETTE /THE CANADIAN PRESS
Article content
Const. Morgan Russell was known as a mentor to many during his 33 years with the tight-knit South Simcoe Police Service.


In his role as a recruiter, he was on the interview panel six years ago for a young man “who would turn out to be just like Mo,” a colleague recalled Thursday at the funeral for Russell and Const. Devon Northrup, who were shot dead in Innisfil, Ont., last week.


Colleagues, relatives and police officers from across Canada gathered in Barrie, Ont., for the service that remembered Russell, 54, and Northrup, 33, as funny, kind and dedicated front-line officers who loved their jobs and treated the community members they served with respect.

“Every one of you was touched by these remarkable officers, in every one of you will undoubtedly miss them,” Sgt. Leah Thomas, who described them as kind, compassionate and courageous.


“They showed respect to every single person that they came into contact with. These admirable traits are now their legacy.”




Russell passed over promotional opportunities and stayed on the job past retirement age out of his love for front-line work and a desire to spend time with his family, Thomas and others recalled, while Northrup made a mark during his six years with the force.

The service at the Sadlon Arena, which was attended by families, thousands of police officers, emergency responders and officials, reflected on the risks of the job in light of a string of police deaths that’s shaken forces across the country. Russell and Northrup were shot dead while responding to a disturbance call at a home.

Their families recalled the day they sent their loved ones off to work for the last time.



Const. Annie Romard, Northrup’s spouse who also serves in the small police force north of Toronto, recalled dancing in the kitchen with her partner that morning before saying goodbye, and texting throughout the day about their plans to see each other that night.

“As always, before one of us walked out that door, we said: stay safe,” she said. “Little did either of us know our lives would be changed forever.”

Other speakers remembered Northrup and Romard as a perfect match with complementary senses of humour.

Northrup came from a policing family — parents Ron and Heather, retired RCMP officers, spoke to their “unbelievably painful” loss of their son who had dreamed since high school of becoming a police officer, and loved spending time with family, friends and his hobbies related to fitness and cooking.


Portraits of South Simcoe Police Service Constables Morgan Russell (right) and Devon Northrup are set up onstage before their funeral service in Barrie on Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022.
Portraits of South Simcoe Police Service Constables Morgan Russell (right) and Devon Northrup are set up onstage before their funeral service in Barrie on Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022. PHOTO BY NATHAN DENETTE /THE CANADIAN PRESS
Marisa Russell, the widow of Const. Russell, recalled him hugging their family goodbye, before later getting the news that they had “lost our source of strength.”

“We were so lucky to have Morgan as a part of our family unit for as long as we did,” she said, remembering him as a frontline officer who took risks to protect community safety.

“Please respect our police. They’ve earned it.”

Russell was a trained crisis negotiator, while Northrup worked with the community mobilization and engagement unit and served as a member of the mental health crisis outreach team. The province’s police watchdog has said neither officer drew their firearms before they were shot. Both officers died in hospital after the shooting.




Bagpipes played as pallbearers carried the officers’ caskets to the front of the venue, where flowers and portraits of Russell and Northrup were on display. Folded Canadian flags and police caps were placed on top of the caskets.

Lt.-Gov. ElizabethDowdeswell opened the service with remarks about the two men, saying she had spoken to their colleagues about reflections that “leave no doubt that they were admired, valued and will not be forgotten.”

The deaths of Russell and Northrup mark three officers shot dead in Ontario in a month after the fatal shooting of Toronto Const. Andrew Hong in Mississauga, Ont., in mid-September.

Dowdeswell noted the string of deaths, saying the recent weeks have been “a devastating time for police and emergency services.”


“Perhaps we don’t say it often enough: thank you,” she said.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford walks past the casket of South Simcoe Police Service constable Morgan Russell at a joint funeral service in Barrie, Ont., Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette
Ontario Premier Doug Ford walks past the casket of South Simcoe Police Service constable Morgan Russell at a joint funeral service in Barrie, Ont., Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette
Premier Doug Ford, who became emotional at times as he spoke at the funeral, also noted the recent losses among police.

“We have seen too many days recently when these heroes didn’t return from their shift. That hits home,” Ford said.

“This police family will endure … You will do so with two guardian angels smiling down on you.”

Pallbearers carried the Canada flag-draped caskets out of the venue to bagpipe music at the end of the service.

The funeral also came two days after RCMP officer Const. Shaelyn Yang was fatally stabbed in Burnaby, B.C., during an altercation at a homeless campsite. Yang was a mental health and homeless outreach officer.

Earlier Thursday, uniformed officers lined the streets outside the arena to salute the funeral cortege as it passed. Community members also gathered at the side of the road to watch and pay respects.


Officers from Toronto, South Simcoe, York Region, and Barrie police services along with hundreds of RCMP and other police force members joined the morning procession as it moved through snowy Barrie streets.



In Innisfil, a short drive from where the funeral was taking place, a group of residents gathered at the main worship room at a local church to watch a livestream of it.

Pastor Susan Burston said the church wanted to open its doors to offer community members a place to gather after the tragedy.

“It’s a small community, and everyone wants to be able to come together,” she said after the service. “You didn’t have to know them to be incredibly touched by what happened today.”
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spaminator

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Regimental funeral to be held for Burnaby RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang
The funeral will be held next Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the Richmond Olympic Oval in Richmond

Author of the article:Tiffany Crawford
Publishing date:Oct 26, 2022 • 1 day ago • 1 minute read • Join the conversation

A regimental funeral will be held Nov. 2 for Burnaby RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang, who was fatally stabbed last Tuesday while checking on a homeless person in a tent.


The B.C. RCMP said that funeral arrangements were underway and that a statement from the family is expected in the days to come.


The funeral will be held next Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the Richmond Olympic Oval. The RCMP said it’s working with a number of individuals, groups and businesses that may be directly impacted before releasing details such as traffic closures.

Officers are encouraging members of the public to send an electronic message to the family of Yang at RCMP.Condolences-Condoleances.GRC@rcmp-grc.gc.ca

Yang was stabbed last Tuesday morning as she accompanied a City of Burnaby parks worker who had been sent to a tent at Broadview Park off of Canada Way to advise the occupant that they had to move on.


The Independent Investigations Office, which probes deaths or serious injuries involving police, said Yang shot the man before she died. He was taken to hospital, but is expected to survive.

The B.C. Prosecution Service said first-degree murder charges have been laid against Jongwon Ham. Court records show Ham, 37, is also facing an assault charge related to an incident in Vancouver on March 17.

Homicide investigators said Yang wasn’t at the park to serve the warrant, and they were unaware if she knew about Ham’s background. She died in hospital about 30 minutes after she was stabbed.

— With files from Glenda Luymes



ticrawford@postmedia.com


 

spaminator

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Riderless horse, procession of red serge for B.C. Mountie Const. Shaelyn Yang
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Publishing date:Nov 02, 2022 • 19 hours ago • 1 minute read • Join the conversation
RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang is seen in this undated RCMP handout photo. Thousands of police and other officers are expected to gather in Richmond, B.C., to honour RCMP Const. Yang.
RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang is seen in this undated RCMP handout photo. Thousands of police and other officers are expected to gather in Richmond, B.C., to honour RCMP Const. Yang. PHOTO BY HO /The Canadian Press
RICHMOND, B.C. — Thousands of officers dressed in red serge marched in unison in a procession led by an RCMP pipe band, a hearse and riderless horse in the funeral for fallen RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang.


The procession in Richmond, B.C., began underneath a large Canadian flag hung between two extended ladders from firefighting trucks, as civilians and firefighters in uniform, poppies pinned to their lapels, lined the streets to watch the march.


Yang, a 31-year-old mental health and homeless outreach officer, was stabbed to death two weeks ago while she and a City of Burnaby employee attempted to issue an eviction notice to a man who had been living in a tent at a local park.

Jongwon Ham is accused of first-degree murder in her death and is expected to return to a Vancouver court again today for remand.

Yang, who lived in Richmond, is being honoured by a regimental, or military-style, funeral in accordance with RCMP protocols for an officer who dies in the line of duty.

The RCMP said as many as 2,000 officers from B.C. and across Canada are joined in the procession by members of the Canada Border Services Agency, the Armed Forces, sheriffs, firefighters and B.C. Ambulance Service, while another 1,500 members will also attend the funeral.

Yang’s family said in an earlier statement that they are “going through immense grief” but are grateful for the condolences and support they have received, issuing thanks to the RCMP for making the arrangements to formally honour her.
 

Taxslave2

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I met him in 2015. He was looking for advice on MS after his sister was diagnosed. It was a shock when he found out support doesn't exist.

He started on a good footing but was slappped into reality by the of corruption that runs Vancouver.

Had we not spoke at length, Id have a different opinion. He just doesnt have the spine to take a leadership role.

"Defunding police" to the tune of $5.7M was a fatal mistake.
That and being stuck way out in left field.
 
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spaminator

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Fallen RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang cleared in shooting of homeless man
Yang was stabbed, and later died, during the incident in a Burnaby park in October

Author of the article:Staff Reporter
Publishing date:Dec 04, 2022 • 1 day ago • 1 minute read

The Independent Investigations Office of B.C. has found no wrongdoing on the part of RCMP Const. Shaelyn Yang after an altercation in which she was stabbed and shot a man during a sheltering check in a Burnaby park in October.


The IIO, which investigates deaths or serious injuries involving police, said Yang died about 30 minutes after being taken to hospital.


“The chief civilian director has reviewed the available evidence, including independent witness statements and video footage, and determined that there are no reasonable grounds to believe that any officer has committed an offence,” the IIO statement reads. The matter will not be referred to the Crown for consideration of charges.

Jongwon Ham, 37, who survived gunshot-related injuries, has been charged with first-degree murder.

Yang, 31, was part of a special Burnaby RCMP team that takes the lead on homelessness and mental health issues for the department. Yang had accompanied a parks worker to speak to a man sheltering in Broadview Park.


Her death sparked a massive outpouring of grief as thousands of first responders took part in the Nov. 2 procession. Police personnel from Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and Washington state, plus partners from the Canada Border Services Agency, the Canadian Armed Forces, B.C. Ambulance, B.C. Sheriffs and firefighters joined the processions that lined Metro Vancouver streets to accompany Yang’s body, including one from Burnaby General Hospital to Surrey, and another from Surrey to Richmond.


 
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spaminator

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SIU clears police of wrongdoing in incident where two cops, gunman killed
Author of the article:postmedia News
Published Feb 08, 2023 • 1 minute read

The Special Investigations Unit has cleared police of any wrongdoing following a shooting last October that ended with two South Simcoe Police officers being fatally shot before the gunman died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.


Devon Northrup, 33, and Const. Morgan Russell, 54, responded to a domestic disturbance on Oct. 11, 2022, and were fatally shot inside a house on Somers Blvd., near 25th Sideroad and Ninth Line, around 8 p.m.



Chris Doncaster, 22, of Innisfil, was the accused gunman.



“On my assessment of the evidence, there are no reasonable grounds to believe that the (subject officer) committed a criminal offence in connection with the complainant’s death,” SIU director Joseph Martino said in report released Tuesday.


“I am satisfied that the (subject officer) comported himself lawfully throughout his engagement with the complainant that ended in the complainant’s self-inflicted gunshot wound and death, there is no basis for proceeding with criminal charges in this case. The file is closed.”
 

spaminator

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SIU says two slain police officers were ambushed in Innisfil shooting
Author of the article:Jane Stevenson
Published Feb 09, 2023 • 3 minute read

More dramatic details have been released in a report by the Special Investigations Unit in connection with last October’s fatal shootings of two South Simcoe Police officers at an Innisfil home.


The SIU has cleared police of any wrongdoing following the incident in which Const. Devon Northrup, 33, and Const. Morgan Russell, 54, responded to a domestic disturbance on Oct. 11, 2022.


The two officers were fatally shot inside a home on Somers Blvd., near 25th Sideroad and Ninth Line, that evening before the gunman died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

According to the SIU report, from recordings made at the time, the homeowner called the SSPS non-emergency line to report a man, later identified as 22-year-old Chris Doncaster, “had been arguing with her and that he had a temper. She said he grabbed her glasses from her face and broke them, and that he put a hole in the wall.”

The homeowner told the communications operator, “I want him removed out of my house,” and that police had attended before in the summer to remove him.


The report says the homeowner was asked twice if there were any weapons involved and she twice answered no and also said no to whether he had been drinking.

The SIU report says despite the homeowner’s assertions, Doncaster had “in fact, consumed alcohol. He also had access to firearms inside the home, including a SKS 7.62x39mm semi-automatic rifle, located in a gun safe in his basement bedroom.”

The report states: “While wearing a ballistic vest, (Doncaster) had waited in ambush for the police officers to arrive at his residence.”

Three officers, each in separate cruisers, arrived at the home around 8:45 p.m and were invited inside to where “there was a flight of stairs to the basement, which was dark, and another set of stair leading upstairs.”


When one officer had just reached the upper step, the report says “he heard gunshots ring out.”

When he looked back he saw, “that Officer #1 and Officer #2 were each down with apparent gunshot wounds. He immediately drew his sidearm with his right hand, reached over the railing with it, and began shooting down the stairs.”

The report says “the officer fired 12 to 14 rounds before pausing, removing the magazine from his gun and reloading a full one, and calling out, “Police.”


Not hearing a response, the officer would eventually look down the stairs and see the suspect.

“He was on his back in a pool of blood, a rifle in his hands,” said the report.

An autopsy would later confirm Doncaster died by a self-included gunshot wound to the head.



The report says the officers were fired on 11 times and that neither “had their weapons drawn at the time.”

According to police dispatch recordings from that night, around 8:47 p.m., they heard: “Shots fired, shots fired, we need help now! Officers down, officers down, we need backup now!

The third officer was then heard shouting “… Gun down!”

Minutes later, the third officer said the suspect was in the basement and shortly after that said: “(S)uspect’s down. I think I sh, I got him.”
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Big numbers. Cause it takes lots of tiny pieces to make any significant amount.
I'm not unsympathetic, but I'm no more sympathetic than I am for anybody who dies doing their job.

She jacknifed on black ice with an oversize load
There's a white cross in the borrow ditch where she went off the road
She wasn't going that fast, the responders all say
How it ended that bad, we can wonder all day
--James McMurtry, Jackie