June 27, 2003
Swat teams called
in to end Kuujjuarapik stand-off
Cree, Inuit SQ bring
incident to peaceful end
ODILE
NELSON
Cree and Inuit police forces
called in two provincial swat teams to end a lengthy stand-off with an armed
man in Kuujjuarapik on Monday.
According to a KRPF press
release, the incident began the morning of June 23. Around 7:30 a.m., Cree police
received a phone call complaining that an intoxicated man and woman were having
an argument in a building in Whapmagoostui.
Officers from the Whapmagoostui
Police Force arrived on the scene shortly after only to find the pair walking
along the street outside the building, the press release said.
At this point, the man
was carrying a rifle but the press release made no mention of the man's behaviour
or at what point the woman and man separated. It also offered no details of
how the incident turned into a more than 12-hour standoff with the man barricading
himself in a residential building.
A press release issued
by Whapmagoostui police late Wednesday, however, stressed the man never posed
a threat to the town.
"Throughout the day,
the situation was always under police control and the individual was kept under
close police surveillance. No shots were fired and no members of the public
were ever at risk," the statement said.
The reason the Cree and
Inuit police forces then called on the Surête du Quebec to send up two
swat teams, one from Montreal and the other from Rouyn, was not given. But both
police organizations confirmed the SQ played a role in bringing about the end
of the incident.
Sgt. Ghyslayn Blanchet,
of the Rouyn-Noranda SQ force, said about 20 officers from two squads were sent
up to the village.
"It was mainly a precautionary
measure because the man had a firearm," Blanchet said.
But other sources, who
spoke on condition of anonymity, said they believed the swat teams were also
called in because the suspect has a criminal record of violent and erratic behaviour
while intoxicated.
One resident said he could
only confirm what other locals were saying about the incident.
According to the man, the
incident began at a residence near the suspect's home but by the time the SQ
reinforcements arrived he had moved on to a six-apartment building.
"I know somebody was
using a weapon and the police surrounded him and they were not successful so
they called a swat team that arrived around 4 p.m.," the resident said.
The man said most of the
village's residents were not frightened by the events because police seemed
to have the situation under control.
"Like everybody else,
I was just waiting until they solved it," he said.
But there was concern,
he said, about whether the man was armed when he went into the second building.
"When he walked into
that other [second] building, he didn't have any weapon. What we didn't know
was if there was a weapon because when he went into that building, at that time,
he was walking without a weapon," he said.
Blanchet said after the
swat teams arrived and a perimeter was established, it did not take long for
the incident to be resolved.
"The police made
a security perimeter and after that, the negotiator talked by phone with the
suspect and the suspect agreed to release the place," he said.
It took only a few minutes
for the man to surrender after he began speaking with the negotiator, Blanchet
said.
The man finally gave himself
up around 9 p.m. All sources agreed the man was unarmed at the time.
Police arrested a young
Inuk man in connection with the incident and took him into custody in Whapmagoostui.
He was expected to appear
before a Crown Prosecutor on June 25. But Nunatsiaq News did not receive
confirmation of his appearance or the charge laid against him by press-time.
The young man's name cannot
be released until he is formally charged.
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