Penticton Herald

Terrorism, attempted murder charges pending in Edmonton truck attack

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EDMONTON (CP) — Police say terrorism charges are pending against a suspect arrested after a series of violent attacks that saw an Edmonton officer stabbed and several pedestrian­s run down by a truck.

Edmonton police Chief Rod Knecht did not release the 30-year-old suspect’s name, but said that five charges of attempted murder are also expected to be filed along with dangerous driving and possession of a weapon.

“From all indication­s, it appears that this was a single individual acting alone,” he said Sunday. “We have no reason to believe there is any threat to our city.”

RCMP assistant commission­er Marlin Degrand said the suspect has been on the radar of authoritie­s since 2015 when a complaint was filed suggesting he may have been radicalize­d. RCMP investigat­ed and interviewe­d the suspect, he said.

“At the end of that exhastive investigat­ion there was insufficie­nt evidence to pursue terrorism charges or a peace bond,” Degrand said. “Further, the suspect was actually not deemed, at that time, to pose a threat to the security of Canada.”

Degrand said the suspect is a Somali national who was in the process of making a refugee claim in Canada.

It took place over more than four hours, starting with an attack on an officer outside a football game at 8:15 p.m. Saturday night, leading hours later to a multi-car high-speed police chase through downtown that saw four pedestrian­s run over by the suspect as he twisted and turned his cube van through alleys and cross streets.

It ended when the suspect’s truck crashed onto its side, with police handcuffin­g and hauling him away.No one was killed in the rampage and police say no shots were ever fired.The police officer who was attacked, Const. Mike Chernyk, was released from hospital with cuts to his head and face and scrapes on his arm.Of the four people hit by the truck, two had been released from care as of Sunday afternoon, while the other two remained in hospital.

One person suffered a fractured skull and was initially in critical condition, but had since been upgraded to stable.

Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson said the attack was the work of a “lone wolf.”

“It is vital now that we not succumb to hatred, that we not be intimidate­d by violence,” he said. “Terrorism is about creating panic and about sowing divide and about disrupting people’s lives. We can succumb to that or we can rise above it.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned the violent events overnight Â?as a “terrorist attack” and a “senseless act of violence.”

“Early reports indicate that this is another example of the hate that we must remain ever vigilant against,” Trudeau said in a statement.

“We cannot -- and will not -- let violent extremism take root in our communitie­s.”

In the United States, President Donald Trump’s press secretary issued a statement condemning the attack.

“Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s from the United States are in touch with their Canadian counterpar­ts to offer assistance with the ongoing investigat­ion,” the statement read.

Police say it began outside Commonweal­th Stadium, northeast of downtown, in a game between the CFL’s Edmonton Eskimos and Winnipeg Blue Bombers.

It was military appreciati­on night. Canada’s chief of defence staff, Gen. Jonathan Vance, conducted the pregame coin flip and two CF-18 fighter jets did a flypast before kickoff.

Outside the stadium, a police officer with his marked, flashing cruiser was handling crowd control and security when a speeding white Chevy Malibu rammed through a barrier, sending the officer flying five metres through the air.

The Malibu driver then got out and began stabbing the officer.

“He was stabbed several times and he was able to fend off the attacker even after getting thrown through the air after being struck by the vehicle,” said Det. Bob Walsh, president of the Edmonton Police Associatio­n.

Surveillan­ce video released by police appears to depict the police officer wrestling with the driver on the ground. At one point, it appears the officer is on top of the driver.

Footage shows them both getting to their feet and the driver running across the street while the officer slowly follows behind him into traffic.

“He followed him for a little bit and radioed ahead to let them (police) know what had happened,” said Walsh.

Edmonton police Chief Rod Knecht said an Islamic State flag was found in the front seat of the Malibu.

The manhunt was on. Police set up checkpoint­s and began stopping cars, leading to a second encounter with the suspect, now driving a U-haul cube van, east of the stadium just after midnight.

Knecht said when the U-haul pulled over for the checkpoint, the driver was confronted after he produced identifica­tion linking him to the registered owner of the Malibu.

The U-Haul then sped off toward downtown and Jasper Avenue, the city’s main east-west thoroughfa­re, with multiple police cars in pursuit.

The truck veered into alleys and crossstree­ts through the downtown amid latenight bar and nightclub goers. Knecht said the truck deliberate­ly hit four pedestrian­s.

Austin Elgie, manager of The Pint bar, saw the van zoom by with police giving chase.

The van “peeled” into an alley where people were smoking, he said.

“There were like 10 cop cars following him . . . It was crazy. It just came around the corner, ripping. I thought at first he was pulling over for the cops coming by, but he was clearly the one they were chasing.”

Elgie said the van hit a man who was a bar customer.

“I have a registered nurse on my bar team and I grabbed her and had her look after the guy until the ambulance came.

“He was breathing and we got him in the ambulance and he was still breathing.”

The chase came to an end outside the Matrix Hotel, just south of Jasper Avenue, when the van rolled on its side.

Witnesses said they saw the suspect being pulled from the vehicle through the broken windshield and then placed in handcuffs.

Bystander Natalie Pon posted pictures of the U-Haul on its side with a large hole in the windshield.

Knecht said the suspect was known to police, but there was no warning for the attack. Police were to deliver an update later Sunday.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley called the attacks horrific.“Hatred has no place in Alberta. It’s not who we are. We are in this together and together we are stronger than any form of hate,” Notley told reporters at the legislatur­e.

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