Journal Pioneer

Man fled 2,000 km

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Police say an Ontario man accused of killing his seven-year-old stepson before allegedly injuring a bank employee made it nearly 2,000 kilometres from the scene of the attacks before being arrested.

An Ontario man accused of killing his seven-year-old stepson and badly injuring a banker with whom he’d once had profession­al dealings managed to flee 2,000 kilometres over four days before being arrested, police said Wednesday.

Niagara regional police Chief Jeff McGuire said the nationwide manhunt for 43-year-old Justin Kuijer, which began in St. Catharines, Ont., came to a peaceful end in the parking lot of a Walmart in Kenora, Ont., around 5 p.m. on Tuesday. A member of the public who had heard of the search for Kuijer recognized the van in which the man allegedly fled. Six provincial police officers responded to the tip and arrested the former roofing company owner without incident, McGuire said. Kuijer had been the subject of a Canada-wide warrant on a charge of second-degree murder in the death of his stepson, Nathan Dumas, but McGuire said the man will in fact be charged with first-degree murder in the boy’s death, as well as attempted murder in the attack on the RBC employee. McGuire credited steady media exposure and public vigilance for Kuijer’s arrest, saying the end of the manhunt can help a devastated community begin to heal.

“It’s because of those efforts that Kuijer is in custody today, and the community is safer than it was before his arrest yesterday,” he said at a press conference.

McGuire provided few new details on Kuijer’s alleged crimes or on the massive manhunt, citing the need to keep certain details confidenti­al. But he did provide insight on how police began their investigat­ion.

Police were first summoned to a RBC branch in St. Catharines on Friday morning after reports of an assault. Officers found an employee suffering from stab wounds, he said. McGuire confirmed that the woman, who has not been named, had worked with Kuijer on financial matters in the past.

Witnesses reported seeing Kuijer fleeing the scene in a dark grey van, which enabled police to connect the attack at the bank to another call they were fielding at essentiall­y the same time, he said. Across town, above a sandwich shop owned by Nathan’s grandparen­ts, police said a family member discovered that Nathan had been critically injured.

The boy was rushed to hospital with undisclose­d injuries and died the next morning. Police learned that the van in which Kuijer allegedly fled the bank was registered to the address where Nathan was found. McGuire said the dual attacks had a wide-ranging impact across St. Catharines, a small city in the heart of Ontario’s wine country.

He read a note from a staff member at the school Nathan attended which outlined the grief experience­d by staff, parents and fellow students. Another anecdote from McGuire highlighte­d the national scope of the hunt for Kuijer.

“One of the detectives answered the phone, and it was two officers sitting on the side of the TransCanad­a Highway in Alberta to say they that they’re out looking for our man,” he said.

McGuire said Nathan’s mother and the RBC victim were “elated” at news of Kuijer’s arrest, but were asking to have their privacy respected in the wake of the attacks. The bank employee remains in hospital but is expected to make a full recovery, he added. Kuijer was returned to the Niagara region in advance of a bail hearing scheduled for Thursday.

The next day, Nathan’s family plans to lay the boy to rest at a funeral in neighbouri­ng Thorold, Ont.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A memorial sits outside of the home of Nathan Dumas, the seven-year-old boy who was allegedly murdered by his stepfather, Justin Kuijer, Wednesday in St. Catharines, Ont. Kuijer, who is facing charges of first-degree murder as well as attempted murder...
CP PHOTO A memorial sits outside of the home of Nathan Dumas, the seven-year-old boy who was allegedly murdered by his stepfather, Justin Kuijer, Wednesday in St. Catharines, Ont. Kuijer, who is facing charges of first-degree murder as well as attempted murder...
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