aimeeandbeatles
watermelon
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2007
- Messages
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At least 16 people, including one RCMP officer, were killed over a 12-hour rampage across Nova Scotia, and there may be more.
Some news sources are calling this the deadliest mass shooting in Canada's history.
Here's what I've pieced together::
I posted a few things in the rants thread, so I'll quote them here.
Honestly, I'm still a little peeved off at the lack of Alert Ready. If there's a shooter going around with a fake cop car, you want people to know not to pull over for them.
Some news sources are calling this the deadliest mass shooting in Canada's history.
Here's what I've pieced together::
- At 11:32 PM Saturday night, the RCMP responded to gun complaints in Portapique, N.S., around ~40 km west of Truro. (Interesting fact: The name of Portapique is a bastardized version of "porc-épic", which is French for "porcupine.") They discovered some causalities and houses on fire. They secured the area and began the search.
- At 8:02 AM Sunday morning, the RCMP warned residents in the area to stay indoors, saying it was an "active shooter situation."
- At 8:54 AM, the RCMP identified the suspect (I refuse to use his name) as a 51-year-old man who worked as a denturist in Dartmouth. He owned a house on Portapique Beach Road.
- Throughout the morning, the suspect was spotted in several areas throughout Colchester County (spanning from Glenholme to south of Brookfield), driving a fake police car and wearing a fake uniform. (According to one of his neighbours, he purchased two old police cruisers at an auction and kept them behind the denturist clinic in Dartmouth). From rumours on social media, he was pulling people over to execute them.
- At some point south of Brookfield, the suspect changed vehicles to a silver Chevrolet Tracker. There were also reports of vehicle fires along highway 102.
- At 11:40 AM, the RCMP reported that the suspect had been taken into custody at an Irving's Big Stop in Enfield, N.S. (~40 km from downtown Halifax), and multiple sources report that he was shot and killed by police.
I posted a few things in the rants thread, so I'll quote them here.
There was an active shooter in my county earlier. The police have him in custody now.
I don't know why they didn't use Alert Ready for this, though. They were perfectly happy using it a week or two ago to tell me to stay home due to COVID-19.![]()
Oh, come now. Alerts are only for things people either already know or they're for missing kids that are a thousand miles away and you're supposed to jump out of bed at 3 am (when the alarm goes off) and join a search party - or at least go to the nearest 24-hour gas/convenience store on the off-chance that the perpetrator and kidnapped child will be there and you can phone the cops.
I've been flamed on CBC for making it clear that I would make an effort if the alert was for something local, but if it's hundreds of miles away, there's nothing I can do so sending an alert is pointless. The excuse that "people can travel a long distance in a few hours" just tells me that they'd better send these alerts worldwide, then, because planes go places outside the country - even now, when nonessential air travel is supposed to not be happening.
My main problem with the Alert Ready system is that every single alert is sent at presidential level, which can't be disabled in the phone settings (at least without hacking it). So the "missing kid" alert is sent with the same urgency as "incoming nuclear bombs," leading to desensitization.
Multiple people (including one RCMP officer) died. According to Global News, the shooter also got dead.
More than ten people got dead.They don't know how many for sure because it was all across the province.
Honestly, I'm still a little peeved off at the lack of Alert Ready. If there's a shooter going around with a fake cop car, you want people to know not to pull over for them.
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