The Niagara Falls Review

Mother and four kids killed in gruesome Ottawa attack

Father only survivor of rampage: teen suspect had been living with family

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

Blood spattered the sidewalk Thursday outside a suburban Ottawa home where police recovered the bodies of a mother, her four young children and a family friend from the aftermath of a vicious and unexplaine­d attack.

Febrio De-Zoysa, a 19-year-old internatio­nal student who had been living with the family, faces six charges of first-degree murder.

“This was a senseless act of violence perpetrate­d on purely innocent people,” said Ottawa police Chief Eric Stubbs, who said a knife or other edged weapon was used in the attack.

De-Zoysa, a Sri Lankan national, was in Canada as a student, police said. He also faces one count of attempted murder in connection with the family’s father, who survived the rampage.

De-Zoysa appeared in an Ottawa courtroom Thursday afternoon in what looked like a clean, shiny black track shirt.

He mumbled his assent as the justice of the peace Andrew Seymour ordered him not to speak to the father who survived the attack, or to four other witnesses who provided statements to the police.

His case was adjourned until March 13 to give him time to find a lawyer.

The dead include Darshani Ekanyake, 35, along with her sevenyear-old son, Inuka Wickramasi­nghe, and her three daughters: Ashwini, 4; two-year-old Rinyana; and Kelly, a two-and-a-halfmonth-old baby.

Amarakoon mubiayanse­la Ge Gemini Amarakoon, 40, was also killed in the attack. He was also living with the family and had recently arrived from Sri Lanka, Stubbs said.

The chief said two emergency calls came in at 10:52 p.m. Wednesday describing a man in distress outside in his driveway, screaming for someone to call 911.

Stubbs later identified that man as the family’s husband and father, who is identified in court documents as Dhanushka Wickramasi­nghe.

He was injured and remains in hospital in serious condition, but his injuries are not life-threatenin­g, authoritie­s say.

Shanti Ramesh, who lives across the street from the family, said she heard a commotion late in the evening. From her balcony, she saw a man sitting in the driveway, yelling.

When police arrived they helped carry him away, though it did appear that he was able to walk on his own, Ramesh said.

The killings took place inside a townhome in Barrhaven, a fastgrowin­g suburb about 20 kilometres south of Ottawa’s downtown core. The brick row house sits on a relatively busy through street, which Thursday morning was crawling with police and onlookers, as well as parents and kids heading to one of the two elementary schools nearby.

A trail of blood droplets was still visible on the sidewalk in front of the row of brick townhomes Thursday afternoon. The door of the townhome immediatel­y beside the victims’ residence was also smeared with blood.

A vigil has been set up in a nearby park but some residents, feeling the grief of the event, left bouquets of tulips on the front lawn of the townhouse.

Stubbs said the first officers on the scene identified and arrested the suspect very quickly, before entering the home to find the bodies.

He said police are limited in the details they can provide to protect the integrity of the investigat­ion.

“We know there are a lot of questions about why this tragedy occurred. This is the focus of our homicide unit as they diligently investigat­e this tragic crime.”

De-Zoysa is the only suspect in the case, Stubbs took pains to note.

 ?? PATRICK DOYLE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Members of the coroner’s office talk at the scene of a homicide where six people were found dead in the Barrhaven suburb of Ottawa on Thursday.
PATRICK DOYLE THE CANADIAN PRESS Members of the coroner’s office talk at the scene of a homicide where six people were found dead in the Barrhaven suburb of Ottawa on Thursday.

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