Van plows into Toronto sidewalk; 10 killed, 15 injured
TORONTO (AP) — A 25-year-old driver in a rented van on Monday plowed down a Toronto sidewalk crowded with lunchtime strollers, killing 10 people and injuring 15 others in what appeared to witnesses and the city’s police chief as a deliberate attack.
The driver was quickly arrested in a tense but brief confrontation with officers a few blocks away.
Witnesses and the police chief said the driver, identified by authorities as Alek Minassian, was moving fast – heading south on busy Yonge Street around 1:30 p.m. – and appeared to intentionally jump a curb in the North York neighborhood as people filled the sidewalks enjoying an unseasonably warm day. He continued for more than a mile, knocking out a fire hydrant and leaving bodies strewn in his wake.
Ali Shaker, who was driving near the van at the time, told Canadian broadcast outlet
CP24 that the driver appeared to be moving deliberately through the crowd at more than 30 miles per hour.
“He just went on the side- walk,” a distraught Shaker said. “He just started hitting everybody, man. He hit every single person on the sidewalk. Anybody in his way he would hit.”
Officials would not comment on a possible motive except to play down a possible connection to terrorism, a thought that occurred to many following a series of attacks involving trucks and pedestrians in Europe and the presence in Toronto this week of Cabinet ministers from the G7 nations.
Still, Toronto Police chief Mark Saunders said he did not think it was an accident.
“The incident definitely looked deliberate,” Saunders said at a news conference Monday night as he announced that the initial death toll of nine had risen to 10 after another victim died at a hospital. He said 15 others were hospitalized.
Saunders said Minassian, who lives in the Toronto suburb of Richmond Hill, had not been known to police previously.
Asked if there was any evidence of a connection to international terrorism, the chief only said, “Based on what we have, there’s nothing that has it to compromise the national security at this time.”
A senior national government official said earlier that authorities had not turned over the investigation to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, a sign that investigators believed terrorism was unlikely the motive. The official agreed to reveal that information only if not quoted by name.
Authorities released few details in the case, saying the investigation was still underway, with witnesses being interviewed and surveillance video being examined.