Lethbridge Herald

SHOOTER’S family speaks

Family of Toronto shooter Faisal Hussain said Hussain had a lifelong struggle with mental illness

- Michelle McQuigge and Nicole Thompson THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

A29-year-old man who went on a deadly shooting spree in the heart of Toronto’s vibrant Greektown, killing an aspiring nurse and a 10-year-old girl, had a life-long struggle with severe mental illness, his family said Monday.

Faisal Hussain’s relatives said they were devastated by their son’s “senseless violence” and the loss of life that resulted from it. Hussain was found dead, with a gunshot wound, after exchanging fire with officers during the incident on Danforth Avenue on Sunday night.

“Our son had severe mental health challenges, struggling with psychosis and depression his entire life,” the family said in a statement issued moments after their son was identified as the shooter by Ontario’s police watchdog.

“The interventi­ons of profession­als were unsuccessf­ul. Medication­s and therapy were unable to treat him,” they said. “While we did our best to seek help for him throughout his life of struggle and pain, we could never imagine that this would be his devastatin­g and destructiv­e end.”

Police have revealed next to no informatio­n about Hussain or his motives, but said they are investigat­ing the case from all angles.

Meanwhile, family and friends of an 18-year-old Toronto woman who died in the shooting identified her as Reese Fallon.

Facebook posts from a man who appeared to be Fallon’s father indicated she had just graduated from high school and was about to begin studying nursing at Hamilton’s McMaster University in September. The university issued a statement confirming a new enrolled student died in the attack and extending condolence­s on her death.

One friend described Fallon as a “very happy” person.

“Reese gave the warmest of hugs. She was always so kind,” said Frank Hong. “Everyone ... wanted to be around her.”

One of Fallon’s friends was also injured in Sunday’s attack, Hong said.

Police said six women and seven men ranging in age from 10 to 59 were injured in the shooting.

The attack took place along a stretch of Danforth Avenue, a street packed with independen­t businesses and surrounded by family homes and parks. On Monday, the area was largely deserted as police combed through the neighbourh­ood, though some locals came to the scene in a bid to come to terms with the tragedy.

“It’s like a small village for us,” said Valia Dsaliou, who works at a Greek-language radio station in the area. “This is something that we couldn’t even imagine would happen, but it happened. But we don’t know why or what all this is supposed to mean to us.”

Those answers did not immediatel­y come from Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders, who declined to comment on what prompted the attack.

“We do not know why this happened yet,” he said. “The investigat­ion itself is very fluid, it is very new, it’s going to take some time.”

The shooting began around 10 p.m. on Sunday and only ended after two police officers exchanged gunfire with the shooter on a sidestreet near the site of the carnage, authoritie­s said.

Laurie Gutmann was with family at a restaurant waiting for his partner’s birthday cake to be served when the shots rang out.

“It was very quick — boom boom boom boom — and then we realized it was gunshots. There was a pause, and then there were more gunshots,” he said.

Gutmann said he heard screaming from the restaurant’s patio and saw a woman who had been shot in the thigh and was bleeding on the ground. Servers and fellow patrons provided first aid and held her hand until paramedics arrived, he said.

Toronto Mayor John Tory called the shooting an “unspeakabl­e” act and said the time had come to confront the rising prevalence of guns in the city, which has experience­d a spike in shootings in recent weeks.

“Why does anyone in this city need to have a gun at all?” he said. “I know answering questions like this won’t fully eliminate tragedies like this, but even if we can prevent one of these incidents, then in my view it is a discussion worth having and having very soon.”

At Ontario’s legislatur­e, politician­s held a moment of silence and paid tribute to the shooting victims.

Premier Doug Ford called Sunday night’s incident the most “brazen” in the city to date.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Toronto mayor John Tory, left, and police chief Mark Saunders, right, look on as Ontario Premier Doug Ford speaks during an intergover­nmental meeting in the wake of a mass shooting which happened in Toronto Sunday night, at Toronto City Hall on Monday.
Canadian Press photo Toronto mayor John Tory, left, and police chief Mark Saunders, right, look on as Ontario Premier Doug Ford speaks during an intergover­nmental meeting in the wake of a mass shooting which happened in Toronto Sunday night, at Toronto City Hall on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada