The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘We will heal together’

Despite the chaos Friday, Brookside Drive-area residents say the deadly shooting will not change how they feel about the neighbourh­ood

- BY STU NEATBY

Fredericto­n Mayor Mike O’Brien says his city is beginning to heal.

“This is day two in a hard time in the city of Fredericto­n,” O’Brien said Saturday at Fredericto­n Police Headquarte­rs.

“We will heal together, as I said yesterday. And we are.”

O’Brien made the remarks as new details were released about the man police believe carried out Friday morning’s shooting.

Police have charged Matthew Vincent Raymond, 48, with four counts of first degree murder in connection with the deaths of police constable Robert Costello, police constable Sara Mae Burns as well as civilians Donald Robichaud and Bobbie Lee Wright.

Raymond will appear in court on Aug. 27.

This weekend, police released a statement from the families of both Costello and Burns.

In that statement, the Burns family, said Sara Burns “absolutely loved her job, and went to work each shift committed to serving this great community.

“We appreciate all of the thoughts and prayers during this difficult time, and respectful­ly ask for privacy as we grieve.”

In a statement by the family of Robert Costello, they referred to him a “constable for life.”

“Robb was the single most positive person I have ever met and that was obvious to everyone who met him,” the statement read.

“He had a special way of dealing with people – fair, but strong and tough when needed. He was the only officer I’ve ever known to write a ticket and have the recipient thank him for it.”

Fredericto­n City Police Chief Leanne Fitch confirmed that Costello and Burns were the first officers to arrive on the scene of Friday’s shooting. Aside from the four victims, the only additional injury during the incident was the shooter, Matthew Raymond, Fitch said. Raymond remains in hospital.

Fitch also confirmed that the weapon used in the shooting was a long gun, or rifle. Police have not yet released informatio­n about what motivated the shooting, or whether the shooter knew the other two victims, Robichaud and Wright.

Residents of the apartment block on Brookside will be allowed back into their homes on Monday. Upwards of 54 residents have been evacuated from the apartments.

Sawyer Adams was one of these residents. He said he was awakened on Friday morning by the sound of gunfire.

“I saw a cop with his gun unloading onto the upstairs window across the window beside me,” Adams said.

“I saw a SWAT van pull around the courtyard down there. He started unloading smoke grenades into the window.”

Adams said five police officers moved him out of the building to a nearby Tim Hortons restaurant, where he remained until close to noon.

Like most other residents evacuated from the two apartment buildings, Adams spent Friday night at a hotel in the southern tip of the city. Red Cross staff have booked a block of rooms for the residents, according to the hotel’s assistant general manager.

Adams said he knew most of his neighbours prior to the shooting.

“They’re still really rattled and kind of nervous to go back there. They don’t know what’s going to go on,” he said.

Tyler Broome, a resident of an apartment building next to the site of the shooting, said he spent much of Friday morning holed up in his own apartment after hearing several gunshots. He remained in his home, but said he was anxious throughout the night last night about being near windows.

“When I moved here it felt like a friendly neighbourh­ood,” Broome said.

“It really surprised me when this all happened.”

Lauren Randall, a staff member at a Subway restaurant around the corner from the Brookside apartments, echoed the same sentiment.

Randall, who lives close by, said she was hard pressed to remember the last time she had heard of a crime being committed in the vicinity.

Despite the chaos of Friday morning, all three Brookside Drive-area residents said the shooting will not change how they felt about the neighbourh­ood.

“I’ll be freaked out for awhile but I’ll stay in the same spot because I like my neighbours and everybody in the community,” Adams said.

 ?? STU NEATBY/THE GUARDIAN ?? A monument to the four Fredericto­n residents killed in a shooting Friday morning steadily grew over the course of the weekend. This teddy bear and photo pays tribute to police constable Sara Mae Burns, who her family said in a statement “absolutely loved her job, and went to work each shift committed to serving this great community.”
STU NEATBY/THE GUARDIAN A monument to the four Fredericto­n residents killed in a shooting Friday morning steadily grew over the course of the weekend. This teddy bear and photo pays tribute to police constable Sara Mae Burns, who her family said in a statement “absolutely loved her job, and went to work each shift committed to serving this great community.”

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