The Hamilton Spectator

Fresh trauma for New Brunswick

Only four years since RCMP officers were killed in Moncton

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FREDERICTO­N — Family members of three RCMP officers killed in a 2014 Moncton attack say the Fredericto­n shooting deaths will bring a fresh wave of trauma to New Brunswick — and bring painful memories to the surface for many.

The shootings that killed four people on Friday — including two municipal police officers — come just four years after Justin Bourque’s rampage that killed Constables Doug Larche, Fabrice Gevaudan and Dave Ross.

Daniel Larche, the brother of Doug, said news of the Fredericto­n deaths are difficult to hear.

“I can empathize with what these people are about to go through and hopefully they’ll have the support and some of the tools they need to get through it,” the 46-year-old said. “It’s going to be tough. It’s going to be hard for them.”

Constables Eric Dubois and Darlene Goguen were also injured when Bourque went hunting police officers in a Moncton neighbourh­ood on June 4, 2014. Bourque had targeted police in the hopes of sparking an antigovern­ment rebellion.

Angela Gevaudan, the widow of Fabrice Gevaudan, said that she was feeling a sense of protective­ness on Friday for the families, knowing how they will be overwhelme­d by emotions as they receive news of the officers’ deaths.

They will need to just receive simple informatio­n for a time, as they struggle to process the shock of the deaths of their loved ones, she said.

“It’s going to take a lot of time to process, and the images, moments and memories and everything coming in is going to be difficult for everyone involved,” she said.

“It’s heartbreak­ing and, of course, I’m thinking of everyone who is impacted by it and I’m just hoping that they’ll get the support they need.”

Since she lost her husband, Gevaudan has done volunteer work as an ambassador for Tema, a group that provides help and advocates for first responders who are suffering from PTSD.

She has also offered support and shared her experience with others suffering from trauma.

Gevaudan said she didn’t really want to speak about her own reactions on Friday, saying she didn’t want to make the latest deaths in Fredericto­n about her own difficult memories.

However, the former 911 operator said it will be important for first responders who are angered or upset by the latest deaths to let their emotions come out, rather than suppress them.

“Let emotions you are feeling be acknowledg­ed and be felt. That itself helps you process the trauma and helps with the healing,” she said.

Larche said the difficult memories of his brother’s death continue to be powerful four years after the Moncton murders, and to hear that others in uniform have been killed is hard news to receive.

“There’s an extra attachment I guess, or connection with first responders, given my own attachment to my brother,” he said.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Fredericto­n Police Chief Leanne Fitch addresses a news conference in Fredericto­n on Friday after two police officers were among four people who died in a shooting in a residentia­l area on the city's north side.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Fredericto­n Police Chief Leanne Fitch addresses a news conference in Fredericto­n on Friday after two police officers were among four people who died in a shooting in a residentia­l area on the city's north side.

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