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December 13, 2002
Teenage gunman runs amok
in Iqaluit
Legion closed, taxis
parked
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Iqaluit felt like a city
under siege for a few hours last Saturday night, when a distraught teenage boy
roamed Iqaluit firing random shots with a rifle.
Police ordered taxi drivers
to stay off the road and temporarily prevented people from leaving the Royal
Canadian Legion as they searched for the gunman, RCMP Cpl. Dave Kalist said.
A 17-year-old Iqaluit teenager
faces one count of careless use of a firearm and once count of pointing a firearm
in connection with the incident.
Cpl. Dave Kalist said a
youth, who cannot be named under the Young Offenders Act, was upset over a "personal
situation."
"We were actively
looking for him when we saw and heard shots being fired," Kalist said.
People reported seeing
an armed male in the area known as "DJ hill," above the DJ Specialties
corner store at the edge of Happy Valley, just after midnight.
Kalist and other officers
were searching the 300-block when they saw muzzle flashes from a discharging
rifle on top of the hill.
People throughout the city
heard the shots.
The shooter fled on foot
towards the Legion. Police then told Legion staff to keep patrons inside until
the area was secured, Kalist said.
"Theres nothing
to indicate he was specifically targeting taxis, but we take these situations
very seriously. We did not know what his intentions were at the time,"
Kalist said.
The youth, a student at
Inuksuk High School, was arrested the next day. He was released after a bail
hearing under a strict set of conditions earlier this week, and is scheduled
to appear in court Feb. 3.
Kalist acknowledged the
gravity of the situation just two days after a 13-year-old Iqaluit girl
was found dead in her home. However, police say the two incidents are not connected.
"We want to let people
know it was serious but theres no need to take any special precautions,"
he said.
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