USA TODAY International Edition
Toronto van suspect praised mass killer on his Facebook page
TORONTO – A man whose Facebook account paid homage to a mass killer was charged Tuesday with 10 counts of firstdegree murder, a day after police say he plowed a rented van onto a crowded sidewalk in what eyewitness accounts and surveillance video appeared to indicate was a deliberate attack.
Alek Minassian, 25, handcuffed and wearing a white jumpsuit, appeared briefly in court but spoke little, telling the judge his name and saying he understood the charges. He also was charged with 13 counts of attempted murder.
Justice of the Peace Stephen Waisberg barred Minassian, who remains in custody, from contact with the victims or their families. Minassian was represented by the Canadian equivalent of a public defender but did not enter a plea. He was ordered back in court May 10.
The nation of 35 million people remained stunned and in mourning. The carnage represented the worst mass killing in Canada since 1989, when Marc Lepine shot and killed 14 women at an engineering school in Montreal before taking his own life.
President Trump expressed solidarity: “Americans stand with you and all of Canada, Prime Minister @JustinTrudeau. Our thoughts and prayers are with you all. #TorontoStrong”
Investigators were determined to learn who Minassian is and why he raced down the sidewalk in a white Ryder van, slamming into pedestrians along a busy stretch of Yonge Street.
Ten people were killed and 14 injured Monday. Authorities said they expected to charge Minassian with a 14th count of attempted murder.
Investigators said that Minassian had not been known to authorities and that no motive had yet emerged — but that his actions seemed deliberate.
Minassian was briefly enlisted in the Canadian Armed Forces, serving for two months in late 2017, Canada’s Department of National Defense confirmed in a statement to USA TODAY.
“He did not complete his recruit training and requested to be voluntarily released from the CAF after 16 days of recruit training,” the statement said.
A post referencing “incel rebellion” and 2014 mass killer Elliot Rodger appeared on Minassian’s Facebook account before the attack Monday. “Incel” is slang for involuntarily celibate. Rodger killed six people and injured 14 near University of California-Santa Barbara and killed himself.
“Private (Recruit) Minassian Infantry 00010, wishing to speak to Sgt 4chan please,” the original Facebook post reads. “C23249161. The Incel Rebellion has already begun!.. All hail the Supreme Gentleman Elliot Rodger!”
Facebook spokeswoman Meg Sinclair said Minassian’s account has been deleted. “There is absolutely no place on our platform for people who commit such horrendous acts,” she said in a statement