Times Colonist

Teen killed in gang shootout mourned

Hit by stray bullet in Vancouver while riding in family car

- LAURA KANE

VANCOUVER — A 15-year-old who was struck by a bullet when his family’s car passed a gang shooting in Vancouver is being remembered as a polite, friendly boy who loved to swim and was training to be a lifeguard.

Mark Bottrill, head coach of the Hyack Swim Club, said Alfred Wong was the teenager who died Monday after getting caught in the crossfire Saturday evening. He said he saw the shooting on the news and was stunned when Wong’s parents told him the victim was their son.

“You can’t believe it. It’s shocking and devastatin­g, and you just don’t really even grasp it in the moment,” he said.

Vancouver police have said the boy was heading home to Coquitlam with his parents when shots were fired between at least two people and he was struck. The shooting was gang-related and the 23-year-old man who was the target of the attack also died in hospital, Vancouver Police Chief Adam Palmer said.

Palmer called the shooting “reckless” and “reprehensi­ble,” and has dedicated more than 50 officers to the investigat­ion.

Police have identified the man who died as Kevin Whiteside and said he was known to police. Other suspects have not been identified and no arrests have been made.

Bottrill said Wong joined the swim club when he was a young boy and swam competitiv­ely until about two years ago, when he switched to a non-competitiv­e group that met twice a week. The group of about 12 kids was tightknit and Wong’s death has left a “big piece” missing, Bottrill said.

“When we told the kids that Alfred was, in fact, the boy, it just takes a minute for it all to sink in. Then you have the various reactions of shock and disbelief and upset,” he said. “As time passes on, and more and more people become aware of it and more people talk about it, it ends up becoming more emotional.”

Bottrill did not personally coach Wong, but he said he knew the boy and he was nice, smart and well-liked by his teammates. Wong had recently joined their volunteer lifeguard program.

He said Wong attended Pinetree Secondary School. Police are arranging for counsellor­s to speak with children in his swim group and on his basketball team.

Wong’s parents are planning his funeral and have asked the swim club to post the details when they’re finalized, Bottrill said, adding that Wong has an older brother.

Swimming Canada, the national governing body for competitiv­e swimming, tweeted its “sincere condolence­s” to Wong’s friends, family and teammates.”

The Coquitlam Christ Church of China posted on Facebook that the 15-year-old victim was a member of their congregati­on.

“We are devastated and saddened over his loss, and our hearts ache with his family,” the church said, without identifyin­g the boy by name.

Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart offered his condolence­s to Wong’s family, calling him an “unfortunat­e innocent victim” of gang violence.

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