The Peterborough Examiner

‘100 per cent overwhelmi­ng’

Detective reflects on van attack that killed 10 people in 2018

- LIAM CASEY

TORONTO — Inspector Graham Gibson never bought into the argument that autism prevented Alek Minassian from knowing that killing unsuspecti­ng pedestrian­s on a crowded sidewalk was morally wrong.

But despite the strong case he built as the lead detective in the Toronto van attack case, Gibson had nervously awaited the verdict unsure of the outcome.

“You never know which way it will go,” he said with relief after a Toronto judge found Minassian guilty earlier this week on 10 counts of murder and 16 counts of attempted murder.

Throughout the investigat­ion and especially on verdict day, Gibson said he thought about the families that lost loved ones in the attack.

“There will never be closure, but this is something that will help them,” he said.

It has been long haul for Gibson since that bright, warm day on April 23, 2018.

After several delays, the Minassian trial was set to begin in April 2020, but then the pandemic hit and it became unclear when, or how, it would happen.

Court eventually decided to proceed via videoconfe­rence, and the eight-week trial began last November on Zoom.

Minassian offered investigat­ors and forensic psychiatri­st who assessed him a number of motives for his deadly rampage. He said he was infatuated with a mass murderer and the forefather of the so-called “incel” movement — males who are involuntar­ily celibate and hate women because they will not have sex with them.

The attack, he told police, was retributio­n against the world because as an “incel” he saw himself at the bottom rung of society. He later told a psychiatri­st he didn’t really hate women, but then told another doctor he wanted many women to die that day.

Other motives he gave included notoriety, a strong desire to commit a mass killing, loneliness and worry about failing at a new job. Gibson said a few of those motives rise above the others. “You have somebody who sets out to murder people in the name of being an incel, who is a misogynist and he wanted that notoriety,” he said.

Gibson was on duty when the first reports of a major incident started coming into the Toronto police operations centre around 1:30 p.m. that day three years ago.

Multiple pedestrian­s had been hit, apparently deliberate­ly, by a man in a van driving along the sidewalk. Some, dispatch heard, may have been killed.

Gibson left the police headquarte­rs and rushed to the scene on Yonge Street — one of the busiest in the city.

The crime scene stretched for 2.5 kilometres, he recalled. Eight people had died on the sidewalk or road and their bodies remained there. Two others died later in hospital.

Many others were injured. The city was in a panic.

“It was 100 per cent overwhelmi­ng,” Gibson said. “It’s referred to as scene shock. Your mind starts to race and you wonder, ‘how am I going to get this chaos under control?’”

The pressures were immense, and sometimes diametrica­lly opposed.

“You have people who’ve been severely and graphicall­y injured, and out of respect for the families and for the deceased themselves, you want to remove them from public site as quickly as you can,” he said.

“It’s very distressin­g for the community and for the public. But then you know there’s certain things that you need to do to make sure that you’re recording what happened appropriat­ely for court.”

Minassian admitted to planning and carrying out the attack, leaving his state of mind at the time of the attack as the only issue at trial.

“I’m very, very relieved for the families,” Gibson said after the guilty verdict. “I think it’s a good win for them.”

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Emotions flooded Insp. Graham Gibson's mind when a judge found Alek Minassian guilty of murder in the van attack in Toronto. Gibson was the lead detective in the investigat­ion.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS Emotions flooded Insp. Graham Gibson's mind when a judge found Alek Minassian guilty of murder in the van attack in Toronto. Gibson was the lead detective in the investigat­ion.

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