Calgary Herald

Report details death of troubled disabled man in 2016 police shooting

- B I L L G R AV E L A N D

David Mcqueen’s life was in a downward spiral years before the disabled man started shooting randomly from his house and was killed by a police sniper bullet to the head, says a report into his death.

A fatality inquiry heard that Mcqueen, 53, began firing a gun from the Calgary home on the afternoon of Jan. 24, 2016. One shot shattered the windshield of a transit bus and sent glass into the driver’s face.

Mcqueen was forced outside when officers fired tear gas into the home, but he continued shooting before he was shot dead.

“Although his death is tragic given his mental state and personal circumstan­ces, he posed a significan­t ongoing threat to police and the community, leaving police no option but the use of lethal force,” provincial court Judge Sharon Van de Veen wrote in her report released Wednesday.

Mcqueen became a quadripleg­ic in 1994 after he dove into shallow water at a Calgary lake and broke his neck. He used a wheelchair and had the use of his arms, but his hands had deteriorat­ed years before and became claw-like.

The report said his condition worsened after his beloved dog, Bear, died of cancer.

He also went heavily into debt paying for his medical treatment

and had ongoing feuds with Alberta Health Services about the care he was receiving. He was cut off from home care because he was belligeren­t, refused to attend medical appointmen­ts and didn’t account for money he had received.

In protest, he once sat in his own feces for an extended period of time.

The judge said other than antidepres­sants, Mcqueen received no mental-health care

“It appears Mr. Mcqueen was left to fend for himself the last week of his life, which he would have been unable to do,” wrote Van de Veen.

“He began believing people were spying on him” and that health officials “had planted microphone­s or listening devices throughout his home.

“He was extremely isolated.” The judge said Mcqueen was clearly in anguish and is likely to have wanted to die at the hands of police.

She made a series of recommenda­tions, including that Alberta Health Services carry out an independen­t study of glaring gaps in mental-health care. She said the study should include why police are commonly called as first responders when people are in crisis.

The judge also suggested mental-health profession­als be made available to individual­s like Mcqueen.

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