Ottawa Citizen

Trudeau meets with families of fallen N.B. officers

OUTPOURING OF GRIEF AS FREDERICTO­N MOURNS FOUR VICTIMS OF LAST WEEK’S SHOOTING

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met with families of fallen Fredericto­n police officers Sunday, and said he told their children something he had learned: mourning is made a little bit easier when you’ve got the whole country’s support.

Trudeau and his son Hadrien went to Fredericto­n’s police headquarte­rs to lay flowers at the growing memorial for two officers and two other victims of Friday’s violence.

Trudeau had planned to march in Sunday’s Pride parade in Fredericto­n, but his plans changed after the shooting at a north-side apartment complex that killed Bobbie Lee Wright, Donnie Robichaud, Const. Robb Costello and Const. Sara Burns.

Speaking to reporters, he appeared to allude to the public support he received after the death of his own father, the late prime minister Pierre Trudeau.

“I talked to their kids and highlighte­d something that I had experience­d (which) was when you have a whole community, and indeed a whole country supporting you through terrible grief, it actually does make it a little bit easier, not much easier but a little bit easier,” he said.

A subdued Pride parade went ahead Sunday afternoon, with Mayor Mike O’Brien calling it a way for Fredericto­n’s residents to begin healing.

“It’s a way for our community to start rebuilding our faith in community and having a celebratio­n,” O’Brien said Saturday. “There’s a way to celebrate even in the midst of this grief.”

It began with a moment of silence, and parade organizers said in a Facebook post that they were marching “in appreciati­on of our Chief of Police Leanne Fitch, the first responders and all the officers who risk their lives on a daily basis to keep us safe.”

The force announced Sunday that a regimental funeral “to celebrate the lives of our fallen members” will be held on Saturday at the Aitken University Centre at the University of New Brunswick.

The Fredericto­n Police Force’s public informatio­n officer, Alycia Bartlett, said in a release that a book of condolence­s will be available to the public in the council chambers of Fredericto­n City Hall on Monday.

There has been an outpouring of grief in the small city, with residents stopping by police headquarte­rs to drop off flowers, notes and teddy bears for the fallen officers.

“I want to extend my sincere thanks to all of you on behalf of the Fredericto­n Police Force,” Fitch said in a written statement Sunday. “Your support, as demonstrat­ed by the flowers and cards that are left in front of the police station, is appreciate­d by us all.

“Everyone in our community is hurting with the deaths of four of our citizens, but the support of the community to our fallen officers the two others killed, and all of their families and friends, is appreciate­d.”

On Sunday evening, Trudeau was to attend what was described as a “Fredericto­n Pride social event” at a local pub.

Asked by reporters earlier in the day about potential new gun laws, Trudeau said it wasn’t the time to be talking about that, but alluded to various gun tragedies including the shooting in Toronto’s Greektown that left two people dead and 13 others injured.

“Obviously, I think there is a reflection going on around the country, around how we can ensure our communitie­s are safer, individual­s are safer, our police officers are safer,” he said.

“I think there are natural conversati­ons to be had around now: Do we need to take further steps, do we need to go further? And these are things we are talking with Canadians about, we are talking with experts about and we are reflecting on it.”

Costello, 45, was a 20-year police veteran, while Burns, 43, had been an officer for two years.

Robichaud, 42, had begun dating Wright, 32, earlier this month.

Ten children lost a parent Friday morning. Burns was married with three children, while Costello was a father of four, and Robichaud had two teenage sons and an older daughter.

Matthew Vincent Raymond, 48, has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder and is set to appear in court on Aug. 27.

Raymond was shot by police on Friday and was still being treated in hospital for his injuries as of Saturday. Police have not disclosed the severity of his injuries.

Two investigat­ors with Nova Scotia’s Serious Incident Response Team, a police watchdog agency, were dispatched to Fredericto­n on Friday to investigat­e police involvemen­t in Raymond’s injuries.

Police did not say if the suspect and victims were known to each other, and a motive was not yet known.

Both Robichaud and Raymond were residents of the complex, but lived in different buildings, according to the landlord.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his son Hadrien, 4, place flowers outside the police station in Fredericto­n on Sunday in memory of two officers killed Friday.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his son Hadrien, 4, place flowers outside the police station in Fredericto­n on Sunday in memory of two officers killed Friday.

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