Edmonton Journal

Driver turns himself in after 4 people hit

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MISSION, B . C. • The driver of a truck has turned himself in after he is alleged to have hit four people who were marching in Mission, B.C., to draw attention to residentia­l schools, RCMP say.

Mounties said Monday that the 77-year-old man is not in custody but is co-operating with investigat­ors, and his truck has been seized for examinatio­n following the march on Saturday.

Police say the March for Recognitio­n for Residentia­l Schools temporaril­y blocked the only eastbound travel lane of the Lougheed Highway as a group made its way to the site of the former St. Mary's residentia­l school.

The man learned through the media that police were looking for him and turned himself in, police said.

RCMP have previously said they were called after an “impatient” driver tried to get around the march, resulting in “minor injuries.”

But now they say a bystander called when a fight was about to break out, and police only learned upon arrival that the pickup truck had driven through the group of demonstrat­ors.

Police said investigat­ors still need more details and are specifical­ly looking for the driver of a single-unit dump truck or semi truck that was behind the pickup truck in question.

“This has been a traumatizi­ng event for the people involved in the March, as well as the wider community, and police are working hard to gather all of the evidence to help to bring some answers and some closure to everyone involved,” Const. Harrison Mohr said.

“Like any criminal investigat­ion, we need to let the evidence guide the investigat­ion, and that's why we're continuing to ask for more witnesses to come forward.”

On Sunday, Mission RCMP said in a news release: “There is no indication that this incident was targeted, or that the driver's actions had anything specifical­ly to do with the people marching or their cause.”

That release can no longer be seen on the Mission RCMP website.

Troy Ingraldi took part in the march and said he watched the truck driver pull into a turnout before trying to pass the group.

He said Sunday he tried to stop the driver because there were children and elders around, and the driver began yelling expletives and telling the group they shouldn't be on the road.

Ingraldi alleged the man told the group he would run them off the road.

“That's when he ended up hitting me with the front driver side of his vehicle,” Ingraldi said. “It kind of dragged me a little bit underneath and then pushed me off to the side of the truck.”

None of the allegation­s have been proven in court.

Ashton Edwards, who was helping run the march as part of the Crazy Indians Brotherhoo­d, said a man in front of him was jumped up, bending over the hood. He said he tried to pull the man off the hood, and that's when he was struck and spun around. The man then drove off, he said.

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