Toronto Star

Rebuild public trust

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We’ll have to wait weeks or months for the official version of what exactly went down late Sunday night in a park in North York. But even before all the facts are known, there are serious questions about the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the death of Alex Wettlaufer.

He’s the 21-year-old man who was shot dead by Toronto police just before midnight on Sunday. The province’s Special Investigat­ions Unit (SIU) is on the case, so the usual veil of silence has been drawn over the incident.

But this much is known: Police say they had “preliminar­y informatio­n” that two men were fighting at the Leslie subway station and one of them had a gun. Investigat­ors say one man fled into the nearby park. There was a confrontat­ion with police, and Wettlaufer was fatally shot.

Wettlaufer’s family, however, tells a very different story. They describe him as a quiet man with a full-time job whose ambition was to join the military. His mother, Wendy, says he was on his cellphone in the park, talking to a family member, at the moment he was shot. “He was crying, saying that he’s being surrounded,” she told CP24. “They kept telling him to put the weapon down, and he kept hollering telling them he didn’t have a weapon.”

Did Wettlaufer have a gun? Or did police mistake his cellphone for a weapon? These are among the questions that SIU investigat­ors, who look into all deaths involving police, must try and answer amid the disturbing claims from Wettlaufer’s family.

Without video or other independen­t evidence, though, they will have to rely mainly on the version provided by police themselves. Wettlaufer cannot give his side. And in the wake of the Sammy Yatim shooting, many people will be understand­ably skeptical of the story told by police.

Yatim’s death in 2013 was captured on video from multiple angles. It showed a Toronto police officer, Const. James Forcillo, shooting Yatim eight times on an empty, stopped streetcar. In January, Forcillo was convicted of attempted murder — but there’s little doubt that without the video evidence he would have gone free. That’s what happened with every other officer charged with murder or manslaught­er.

Ironically, Wettlaufer attended the same school as Sammy Yatim and they were said to be friends. The public was shocked by Yatim’s death because the video showed conclusive­ly that it simply didn’t have to happen. He was trapped alone on the streetcar and there was no good reason to shoot him. Chief Mark Saunders himself acknowledg­ed at the time that his force had lost public trust.

After that, Torontonia­ns are in no mood to quietly accept the death of yet another young man in questionab­le circumstan­ces. His shooting is another argument for all officers to wear body cameras, so there would be independen­t confirmati­on of how the confrontat­ion developed.

In the absence of that, the public will expect a thorough investigat­ion that does not take the official explanatio­n at face value.

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