Times Colonist

Son of hostage-taker tells B.C. coroner’s inquest his dad was ‘loving’ person

- The Canadian Press

BURNABY — A B.C. coroner’s jury has heard that a man who held his partner hostage and died in a spray of RCMP gunfire was a loving man who didn’t have the opportunit­y to “get clean” from his drug addictions.

A statement written by Jamie Perrin was read at the opening of the coroner’s inquest into the deaths of his father, Randy Crosson, and Crosson’s girlfriend Nona McEwan in a home in Surrey in March 2019.

Perrin’s statement said his father had a hard life and “didn’t have the opportunit­ies to get better and to get clean.”

“What you are about to hear is about a man on drugs, struggling with life. But this was not my dad. My dad was a loving, caring person who loved all us kids. I’m sorry for what he has done with life but hopefully today we can learn from this,” he said in the statement on Tuesday.

B.C.’s police watchdog cleared police of wrongdoing in a report that said RCMP officers shot and killed Crosson, but also accidental­ly hit McEwan with two bullets. She later died in hospital.

The Independen­t Investigat­ions Office said McEwan’s death was because of the actions of Crosson, who held her in front of him as a shield against police bullets. Its report said officers entered a home and found Crosson holding a knife to the woman’s neck with what appeared to be a gun in his other hand.

The office said a number of officers shot at Crosson, killing him at the scene, but McEwan was accidental­ly struck.

Forensic investigat­ors at the scene would later find what the report described as “a realisticl­ooking replica pistol.”

Brandon McEwan, Nona McEwan’s son, testified in person Tuesday that his mother was much loved and always tried to do at least one good deed a day.

“She was a great mother. We always had food in our stomach, a roof over our head. We always had clothes on our back and things that we needed or wanted,” he said through tears.

It was Brandon McEwan who called 911 the night of the police shooting because his father, who lived in a trailer on the same property where Nona McEwan and Crosson lived, heard a loud bang and a scream.

McEwan testified that he told the 911 operator that he believed his mom wasn’t safe inside the home with her boyfriend, who he thought had a gun.

The jury heard that Crosson had previously been in a fight with Brandon McEwan’s father and was told to leave the house.

Sgt. Chris Payette, a supervisor with the Surrey RCMP at the time, testified that they tried to get a response from anyone inside the house, making phone calls and banging on the walls with a metal tool. But they were not successful. That led to the decision to call the emergency response team, who are better trained to enter a home, he said.

Brandon McEwan said he stood a block away watching as a “tank” was brought in, and heard flashbangs near the site.

McEwan told a lawyer representi­ng the RCMP that he didn’t see the flashbangs or tear gas being deployed, but officers standing with him at the time explained what he was hearing.

“These guys are supposed to be trained profession­als, and they didn’t seem that profession­al in my eyes,” he said.

Kali Cosmo, who lived in an apartment in the basement of the house, said Crosson “terrorized her” while she lived there, often yelling and staying up late into the night, and leaving “mean notes” on her car.

She told the jury that in the days leading up to police confrontat­ion, Nona McEwan was pleased because Crosson was supposed to be leaving the house and “she expressed happiness that she would be able to discover herself and live for herself.”

The jury heard that Crosson was diagnosed as bipolar at a time when he was in prison.

The inquest is expected to continue for two weeks.

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