Truro News

Mayor says there is apprehensi­on on eve of school shooter sentencing

-

An imminent sentencing decision for a young man who pleaded guilty to fatal shootings at a school and a home is stirring anxiety in the remote northern Saskatchew­an community where they occurred.

A ruling by Judge Janet Mcivor on whether the shooter will be sentenced as a youth or an adult is to come down in La Loche today.

He was just shy of his 18th birthday when the shootings occurred and cannot be identified under provisions of the Youth Criminal Justice Act.

Two years ago, the teenager killed two brothers in their home and then shot up the La Loche high school. A teacher and a teacher’s aide were killed and seven people were injured.

La Loche Mayor Robert St. Pierre said there’s apprehensi­on among some residents.

“It’s a day that we knew was coming and it’s finally upon us,” St. Pierre said in an interview this week with The Canadian Press. “It’s both good and bad, I guess. At least we’ll have a decision and maybe it will help with moving forward.

“What the decision will be will be another thing.”

Mcivor’s decision in La Loche is also to be broadcast using a videoconfe­rencing link to the Meadow Lake, Sask., courthouse where the sentencing hearing was held.

The prosecutio­n argued at the hearing that the shooter should be sentenced as an adult after pleading guilty to two counts of first-degree murder, two counts of second-degree murder and seven counts of attempted murder.

His defence lawyer, Aaron Fox, is seeking a youth sentence because his client suffers from fetal alcohol syndrome and doesn’t have a criminal record.

A youth sentence carries a maximum term of six years in custody and four years of supervisio­n. As an adult, the shooter faces an automatic life sentence, but would get credit for time already spent in custody, meaning he could be eligible for parole after 10 years.

Fox said this week that he expects the judge to provide her decision on youth versus adult as well as the actual sentence.

“He knows he’s facing a lengthy period of incarcerat­ion no matter what the decision is, and he’s prepared for that and accepts that.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada