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January 10, 2003
Violent police stand-off
grips POV
One man injured, siege
ends peacefully after 20 hours
ODILE NELSON
Tension gripped Puvirnituq
this past weekend when a young, mentally ill man, armed with his fathers
20-gauge shotgun, barricaded himself into his family home on Friday evening
and forced a 20-hour stand-off with local police.
Before the incident ended
peacefully the next afternoon, eight members of the Kativik Regional Police
Force were guarding a perimeter around the building, the Sûreté
de Quebec had been called in to force the young man out of the building, and
the young man had shot a local elder three times.
Captain Larry Hubert headed
the police response after he and three other officers arrived from Kuujjuarapik
at 3 a.m. Saturday morning.
Hubert said he has been
through such stand-offs before, but this one was exceptional because the young
man has a history of schizophrenia.
"There have been gun calls
in the area before. But its been years since something like this," Hubert
said. "In nine out of 10 cases theyre drunk and if there are no hostages,
all we do is wait for them to sober up. We can usually talk them down the next
day. But there was no talking sense with him. We had to take him. He wanted
us to kill him or him to kill us."
The events police
log details a stand-off that, at times, grew more serious and unpredictable
with each passing minute.
For example, at 9:38 p.m.
on Friday, the suspect was discovered behind his family home. Four minutes
after, he shot twice at a police truck. Two minutes later he shot at a
police officer. Another five minutes and the young man had the rifle in his
own mouth, threatening to take his own life.
And though the young man
slept through the night, tensions mounted the next morning when a parade
of friends and community members arrived to persuade the young man to surrender.
First came the young mans
father and brother-in-law. The frightened young man did not respond. Paulusi
Novalinga arrived next and tried to pacify the young man through a loudspeaker. He
again refused to answer.
Then at 10:20 a.m. Taamusi
Sivuaraapik, a respected elder and local justice-of-the-peace, drove up on his
snowmobile.
Before he even had
a chance to speak, shots rang out from the homes second- floor window.
The elder was wounded with three pellet shots to his head and throat.
Though the pellet wounds
were non-threatening, Sivuaraapik was sent to hospital and later to Montreal
to have the pellets removed.
By 10:30 Saturday morning,
with the seriousness of the situation rapidly escalating, Hubert was on the
phone with the SQ in Kuujjuaq. He made an urgent request for the Kuujjuaq detachment
to ask its Montreal branch for reinforcements. The SQ agreed and began organizing
a unit of 15 tactical experts.
But 10 minutes before
5 p.m., with the SQ team on its way to Puvirnituq, the young man surprised everyone
when he walked unarmed out of the house.
Police demanded he drop
to the ground, but instead, the young man ran away from the building with police
in pursuit. Less than two minutes later, police had wrestled him down.
By 5 p.m. Saturday, 20
hours after the first shots ripped through Puvirnituq, the police had their
suspect in custody.
James Ivillaq, 20, was
arraigned on charges of attempted murder, illegal use of a firearm, and evading
arrest, in relation to the incident earlier this week, and has been transferred
to Amos, Que.
Since his arrest, the towns
mayor and even the suspects parents have praised Hubert and the other
seven KRPF officers who handled the incident.
"They were very professional.
They did the best they could given the circumstances," Novalinga said in an
interview this week. "[Even] the parents are happy with the end result. Very
much so. They are happy their son is alive."
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