Toronto Van Attacker, Alek Minassian Charged With 10 Counts Of Murder
A driver
suspected of killing 10 people and injuring 15 more by ploughing a rental van
into pedestrians in Toronto has appeared in court in the city.
Alek
Minassian, 25, was charged with 10 counts of first-degree murder and 13 counts
of attempted murder.
Mr Minassian
wore a white jumpsuit, with a shaved head and his hands behind his back. He
showed little emotion.
He was read
the charges and ordered to have no contact with surviving victims. He will
return to court on 10 May.
A man
believed to be a relative of Mr Minassian's sat in the front row of the court
and wept. Asked by reporters after the hearing if he had anything to say, the
relative replied "sorry".
Mr
Minassian's court appearance came shortly after Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau addressed reporters in the city, calling the incident a "senseless
attack and a horrific tragedy".
The suspect
was arrested several blocks from the scene of the attack, after a tense
standoff with a police officer, during which he pointed an object at the
officer and claimed to have a gun.
"I
don't care. Get down," the officer said, before arresting Mr Minassian
without firing a shot. The arrest was filmed by two bystanders and the officer
was praised for not opening fire.
Mr Trudeau
praised the police response, saying officers "faced danger without a
moment of hesitation".
Police said
the suspect in the van mounted the kerb on Yonge Street between Finch Avenue
and Sheppard Avenue at about 13:30 local time (17:30 GMT) on Monday and drove
into pedestrians along a 1km (0.6-mile) stretch.
Reza
Hashemi, who owns a video shop on Yonge Street, told the BBC he heard screaming
on the other side of the road. He said the van was repeatedly mounting the
pavement and running into people
One witness
told City News that the driver was "hitting anything that comes in the
way".
"People,
fire hydrants, there's mail boxes being run over," said the unnamed man,
who said he was driving behind the van during the incident.
As the van
continued, the man said he sounded his horn to try to warn pedestrians. "I
witnessed at least six, seven people being hit and flying in the air, like
killed, on the street," he said.
Pictures
from the scene showed bodies covered in orange sheets along the van's route.
Debris and items of clothing were scattered across the pavements and road.
The van was
brought to a halt by police several streets away and was quickly surrounded.
The suspect was arrested 26 minutes after the first emergency call was made to
the police.
Police said
Mr Minassian was from the northern Toronto suburb of Richmond Hill and was not
previously known to authorities. "The actions definitely looked
deliberate," said Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders.
Public
safety minister Ralph Goodale said there "would appear to be no national
security connections" and Canadian broadcaster CBC cited government officials
as saying he was not associated with any known terror groups.
Mr Minassian
had previously attended a school for students with special needs in north
Toronto, former classmates said.
He would be
seen walking around Thornlea Secondary School with his head down and hands
clasped tightly together making meowing noises, Shereen Chami told Reuters.
But she said
Mr Minassian had not been violent. "He wasn't a social person, but from
what I remember he was absolutely harmless," she told Reuters.
Another
former student, Ari Bluff, told CBC that Minassian did not seem to have
many friends. "I remember seeing him probably just walking down the
halls, usually by himself, or in the cafeteria by himself," he said.
Mr Minassian
went on to attend Seneca College in the North York area of Toronto, where the
van incident took place, CBC reported. Reporter James Moore, with Newtalk 1010,
told the BBC he had heard reports that Mr Minassian was regarded as being
"quite brilliant".
Canada's
Globe and Mail quotes a fellow student as saying Minassian was good at
working with specialised computer chips used to process images.
So far, the
name of only one of those who died has emerged. She has been identified as
Anne-Marie D'Amico, who worked for the US investment company, Invesco, CBC
reports. The company's Canadian headquarters are on Yonge Street.
A South
Korean foreign ministry official told AFP news agency that two of its citizens
were among the dead.
The 15
injured remain in hospitals throughout Toronto.
Van rental
company Ryder System Inc confirmed that one of its vehicles was involved and
said it was co-operating with authorities.
The incident
happened while foreign ministers of the G7 leading industrialised nations -
Canada, the US, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan - were holding talks
in Toronto.
Canadian
Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said the G7 meetings would continue on
Tuesday as planned. "The work of the ministers obviously goes on. This is
a very sad day for the people of Toronto and the people of Canada," she
said.
City Mayor
John Tory urged residents to remain calm. "This kind of tragic incident is
not representative of how we live or who we are or anything to do with life in
the city on a day-to-day basis," he said.
The White
House issued a statement saying the US "stands with the Canadian
people" and offering "any support Canada may need".
FROM bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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