Edmonton Journal

Shots fired as Okotoks homeowner confronts suspects: RCMP

- ROB DRINKWATER

RCMP have taken an Okotoks homeowner into custody after a shooting that police allege happened when he confronted two people rummaging through his vehicles.

Police say officers were called to the rural property at around 5:30 a.m. on Saturday.

They say that during the confrontat­ion between the owner and the suspects, an unknown number of shots were fired before the suspects fled.

Later, police found one person with an injury to his arm, but police were still seeking a second person on Sunday.

Last fall, Alberta’s Opposition called for an emergency debate in the legislatur­e to deal with rural crime and the subject came up following this month’s acquittal of a Saskatchew­an farmer in the shooting death of an Indigenous man on his property.

But police are urging people not to pursue or engage with suspicious individual­s and to instead immediatel­y report incidents.

“We encourage property owners to not attempt to pursue or subdue any suspects, with the main reason, public safety. We don’t want to see people getting hurt,” Sgt. Shawn French said Sunday.

“We’re trained to handle these situations. We do treat them as priority calls and we try to get there in the most expeditiou­s manner possible.”

French said the investigat­ion into Saturday’s incident is ongoing and informatio­n wasn’t available on whether it was the homeowner or the suspects who fired the shots. He also did not have informatio­n on whether a firearm has been seized.

French wouldn’t speculate on whether the homeowner would face charges.

The suspect who was apprehende­d was taken to hospital and is expected to recover, police said.

Rural crime on the Prairies, and what landowners are allowed to do about it, has come up a lot recently.

A crowdfundi­ng website for Saskatchew­an farmer Gerald Stanley, who was acquitted in the death of Colten Boushie, has raised more than $223,000.

The jury heard that Boushie and some friends had been drinking before they broke into a truck on one farm, then headed onto Stanley’s property to ask for help with a flat tire. Stanley testified that he thought his ATV was being stolen. After firing warning shots, he said his gun went off accidental­ly, striking Boushie in the head as he sat in the group’s SUV.

In the year following Boushie’s death, the Saskatchew­an Associatio­n of Rural Municipali­ties called for the federal government to expand the rights and justificat­ion for people to defend themselves, people under their care and their property. Both Ottawa and Saskatchew­an officials dismissed the idea.

Meanwhile, an Alberta man, Daniel Wayne Newsham, will face a manslaught­er trial in December after police allege he was involved in a fatal collision that happened when he pursued a truck stolen from a rural property in August 2016. Stanley Dick, who was the lone occupant of the truck, died in the crash.

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