08-09-2022, 11:50 AM
They've arrested the remaining suspect. There's some history with he & some others in the area.
https://edition.cnn.com/2022/09/07/us/sa...index.html
The suspect in the mass stabbing in Canada was taken into custody Wednesday after a three-day manhunt, according to a tweet from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Saskatchewan.
The RCMP tweeted Myles Sanderson was taken into custody around 3:30 p.m. local time. Sanderson had been considered by police to be "armed and dangerous."
"There is no longer a risk to public safety relating to this investigation," RCMP tweeted.
Sanderson's arrest comes three days after 10 people were killed in the mass stabbing, and additional 18 people were injured. The victims ages ranged from 23 to 78 years old, authorities said.
Sanderson and his brother, Damien Sanderson, were identified as suspects shortly after the attacks. Damien Sanderson was found dead a day after the attacks with injuries that were not believed to be self-inflicted, police said."
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/world...ctims.html
The 32-year-old was the common-law husband of Mr. Burns’s daughter, and he told a parole board that granted his early release from prison this year that he intended to reunite with her. He and his brother, Damien, were both formally accused in the attacks.
Damien Sanderson, 31, was himself found stabbed to death — perhaps at the hand of his brother — on Monday.
At the James Smith Cree Nation, the reserve that bore the brunt of the attacks, residents on their porches rejoiced as word spread that the manhunt was over.
“They caught him, they caught him!” some said, hugging one another.
“There’s a real sense of relief,” said Shania Peters, 22, whose grandmother Gloria was killed in the attack. “A lot of people will sleep better tonight.”
It was not Mr. and Ms. Burns’s first confrontation with Myles Sanderson.
In January 2015, according to court records, Mr. Sanderson was charged with attempted murder after the police said he had repeatedly stabbed his father-in-law with a knife and wounded his mother-in-law. The records do not offer a reason for the assault."
https://edition.cnn.com/2022/09/07/us/sa...index.html
The suspect in the mass stabbing in Canada was taken into custody Wednesday after a three-day manhunt, according to a tweet from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Saskatchewan.
The RCMP tweeted Myles Sanderson was taken into custody around 3:30 p.m. local time. Sanderson had been considered by police to be "armed and dangerous."
"There is no longer a risk to public safety relating to this investigation," RCMP tweeted.
Sanderson's arrest comes three days after 10 people were killed in the mass stabbing, and additional 18 people were injured. The victims ages ranged from 23 to 78 years old, authorities said.
Sanderson and his brother, Damien Sanderson, were identified as suspects shortly after the attacks. Damien Sanderson was found dead a day after the attacks with injuries that were not believed to be self-inflicted, police said."
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/world...ctims.html
The 32-year-old was the common-law husband of Mr. Burns’s daughter, and he told a parole board that granted his early release from prison this year that he intended to reunite with her. He and his brother, Damien, were both formally accused in the attacks.
Damien Sanderson, 31, was himself found stabbed to death — perhaps at the hand of his brother — on Monday.
At the James Smith Cree Nation, the reserve that bore the brunt of the attacks, residents on their porches rejoiced as word spread that the manhunt was over.
“They caught him, they caught him!” some said, hugging one another.
“There’s a real sense of relief,” said Shania Peters, 22, whose grandmother Gloria was killed in the attack. “A lot of people will sleep better tonight.”
It was not Mr. and Ms. Burns’s first confrontation with Myles Sanderson.
In January 2015, according to court records, Mr. Sanderson was charged with attempted murder after the police said he had repeatedly stabbed his father-in-law with a knife and wounded his mother-in-law. The records do not offer a reason for the assault."
in order to be old & wise, you must first be young & stupid. (I'm still working on that.)