The Standard (St. Catharines)

Public visitation held for young woman killed in Danforth shooting

- OLIVIA BOWDEN

TORONTO — Crowds of tearful mourners gathered to remember Reese Fallon at a public visitation on Sunday, a week after she was killed in a shooting rampage in Toronto’s bustling Greektown neighbourh­ood.

They lined up quietly inside the east Toronto funeral home, tissues in hand, to grieve for the 18-year-old who died when a gunman opened fire on pedestrian­s and restaurant-goers on a busy Greektown street last Sunday.

Ten-year-old Juliana Kozis was also killed, and 13 others were injured — some critically.

The gunman was found dead with a gunshot wound after exchanging fire with police, and two concurrent investigat­ions into the incident — one by Toronto police and the other by the province’s police watchdog — are ongoing.

At the visitation on Sunday, Fallon was remembered for her life rather than her death.

A yearbook and other high school memorabili­a lay on a table in the funeral home, next to a T-shirt for Hamilton’s McMaster University, where she had been set to begin studying nursing in the fall.

Photos of Fallon as a child and as a teen lined the hallway leading into the visitation room.

In the aftermath of her death, dozens of Fallon’s classmates and teachers interrupte­d their summer vacations to grieve at the Toronto high school she attended, where she was remembered as a leader among her peers.

A funeral, which will also be open to the public, is scheduled for Monday morning. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to attend.

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