The Hamilton Spectator

Police still hunting suspects in St. Catharines shooting

- MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

The search for two young men believed to be behind a shooting that wounded three people in St. Catharines stretched into a second day on Friday.

Niagara regional police Const. Phil Gavin said all previously cordoned-off areas related to the incident had been released, including a home where the shooting took place.

Despite the progress on the investigat­ion, however, Gavin said the two suspects were still at large.

“The IDs of the suspects remain unknown,” Gavin told a news conference, adding that witness accounts and the investigat­ion so far suggest they may be from outside the Niagara region.

The shooting erupted shortly before 4 p.m. on Thursday in a downtown neighbourh­ood that a local politician described as “economical­ly depressed.”

Police suggested there were multiple scenes of activity and later described the incident as targeted.

They have said they’re looking for two men between the ages of 19 and 23 who were wearing hoodies and jeans.

Two of those injured in the gunfire were transporte­d out of the city with life-threatenin­g injuries, while the third was treated in a local hospital for what were considered less serious wounds, police said.

Gavin said Friday that he did not have any updated informatio­n on the conditions of the injured, and their names have not been released.

Police had kept investigat­ors at three scenes overnight — the original site of the shooting and two nearby homes.

Gavin said investigat­ors eventually concentrat­ed on one residence with suspected ties to the men being sought, adding it is a different home from the one where the shooting likely began.

Gavin said that residents had been cleared by Friday morning and all areas previously impacted by the investigat­ion were once again open to the public.

The investigat­ion had shut down local streets and kept residents out of their homes for several hours while police combed the area.

Gavin said that while the suspects remain at large, they should be treated as armed and dangerous.

But Gavin also emphasized that police believe the shooting was not a random incident.

He said that there appears to be a connection between the suspected shooters and their alleged victims.

Earlier on Friday, police Chief Bryan MacCulloch sent a series of tweets acknowledg­ing the effect such incidents can have on the city.

“We understand that an incident of this nature impacts our entire community,” he wrote. “Our officers are continuing their efforts to investigat­e this matter fully and pursue all leads to identify the suspects involved and bring a peaceful resolution.”

MacCulloch added that he was grateful to all those involved in the “complex and dynamic” shooting investigat­ion.

Coun. Mat Siscoe, who represents part of the area where the shooting took place, said the neighbourh­ood has struggled economical­ly in recent years.

But he said such levels of violence are unusual.

“We’re not used to gun violence in the city,” he said shortly after the incident.

“Not on this scale.”

 ?? AARON LYNETT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A person is escorted from a building on Queenston Street near the site of a shooting in St. Catharines on Thursday.
AARON LYNETT THE CANADIAN PRESS A person is escorted from a building on Queenston Street near the site of a shooting in St. Catharines on Thursday.

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