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Barbie
09-13-2006, 11:59 PM
Gunman killed after college shooting

(Junior College is for late teens/early twenty's - University prep)

http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/americas/09/13/montreal.shooting/index.html

MONTREAL, Quebec (CNN) -- A gunman was killed by police and 20 students were wounded after a Wednesday shooting at Dawson College in downtown Montreal, police said.

Another student -- a woman in her 20s -- died later, Radio Canada quoted Montreal Police Chief Yvan Delorme as saying.

Initial reports indicated that as many as four people, including two gunmen, had been killed, but Delorme told CNN that only the single gunman was killed. Police were looking for other possible suspects, he said.

Delorme would not comment on a motive, but said the shootings were not hate crimes or terror-related. (Watch students flee the scene -- 1:38)

Three of the critically wounded were in operating rooms Wednesday afternoon, and three others were awaiting operations, a Montreal General Hospital spokeswoman said. Two other critically wounded victims were in the emergency room, she said.

All surgeries should be completed by Wednesday evening, she said.

The spokeswoman said at least 14 victims had been brought to area hospitals. Eleven patients were transported to Montreal General and four or five more had been taken to two other area hospitals to ease the burden on Montreal General, she said.

Among the wounds being treated were gunshots to the head, abdomen, chest, arms and legs, she said. (Watch witnesses describe escaping through pools of blood -- 3:44)

Police cordoned off the 12-acre campus after the incident and searched a nearby shopping mall for suspects, a police spokesman said.

A SWAT team was in the college because "we believe there might be other suspects inside the Dawson College," a Montreal police spokesman told reporters.

Police were using search dogs in a door-to-door search for the gunman or gunmen Wednesday afternoon, another spokesman said.

The shots were randomly fired in the cafeteria and atrium, and students said they didn't think anyone was targeted, said reporter Genevieve Beauchemin with the television station CFCF. Students told Beauchemin that at least one of the gunmen was dressed in black.

'He had no emotion'
A student told Global News in Montreal that one of the shooters was in his early 20s and was wearing a trench coat.

"He was saying nothing, just shooting. He told people to get away, and that was it," the student said.

Another student, Daniel Mightley, 21, said the shooting began outside the college. Mightley said he was heading to lunch when he saw one of the shooters to his right. The gunman, who was wearing a black trench coat and had a mohawk, fired a shot and "everybody just ran inside," he said.

"I saw his face and he had no emotion in his face whatsoever," Mightley said. "He was walking very slowly toward us and just shooting."

Mightley said he saw at least one person get shot.

Police had not yet determined how many people were shot, said Sgt. Giuseppe Boccardi.

"My understanding, at this moment, is that most of the students have exited the college grounds," Boccardi said.

Video showed students streaming from the campus after the midday shootings.

"People were literally running for their lives," said Beauchemin, describing what the students told her was a "stampede."

Emergency personnel and police, in bulletproof vests, wheeled people on two stretchers to ambulances. Boccardi said he couldn't provide a description of the victims.

A first-year student who didn't give her name said she saw one victim who had been shot in the leg being helped across the street, and another who had been shot in the stomach lying on the sidewalk.

"We were just sitting in class, and we were listening to the teacher and we heard guns going off," the student said. "We looked outside and everyone was screaming and crying and there were people that got shot that were running away.

"And then our teacher left, and he came back and said the gunmen were inside and we had to leave."

Dawson College will be closed until Monday, Radio Canada reported.

The college has 7,000 day students and 3,000 night students, according to the Dawson Web site.

In Canada, students as young as 16 can attend colleges, which generally serve as bridges between high schools and universities.

This is not the first shooting at a Montreal college. About 17 years ago, Marc Lepine opened fire at Ecole Polytechnique. Fourteen female students were killed in the December 1989 shooting before Lepine killed himself.

Lepine left behind a three-page letter blaming feminists for his not being able to get into the school.


:(

Large Filipino
09-14-2006, 01:00 AM
HI!!

Mattdecay
09-14-2006, 03:18 AM
Best avatar.

Koliedrus
09-15-2006, 07:39 PM
This all really belongs in MFC but...

Here's more.


From: http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1158270614342&call_pageid=968332188492&col=968793972154


Portrait of a killer
Kimveer Gill revelled in death and guns, a fantasy that became real
Sep. 15, 2006. 05:30 AM
BETSY POWELL
CRIME REPORTER

LAVAL, Que.—A hate-filled gun lover who seemed to live most of his life online, a "good son," an alcoholic and a killer who took bloody vengeance on a college he had never attended.

New details about Kimveer Gill paint him as an increasingly troubled young man but even friends who saw warning signs didn't believe he would live out his violent online fantasies of going a murderous rampage.

A few months ago, he emailed his friend Andrew Page a photo of his new semi-automatic gun and predicted "we'd be seeing him on CNN.

"When (Gill's attack on Dawson College) happened ... I had a hunch it might be him because I knew what kind of guy he was," Page told La Presse.

"I knew (yesterday) it was him and I couldn't believe it ... I hadn't seen Gill for three months. I was truly surprised to learn what he'd done."

Page said the pair met at Rosemere Secondary School in Laval where Gill was "isolated" and never had a girlfriend.

They abandoned their courses at Vanier College (which, like Dawson, denied Gill was ever enrolled there).

Gill worked for a company in Dorval for two years but, these past few years, had mostly been on employment insurance, sitting in his parents' basement, becoming an "alcoholic," watching television and playing video games, Page said.

"He didn't like education, work, it was kind of a revolted thing. He had a problem with humanity in general."

While Gill fantasized online, on the VampireFreaks.com website, about being the "angel of death" and leaving a "mangled corpse," in person he talked of wanting to hold up banks but didn't talk about killing people.

"He even told me he had a gun and that it was the most beautiful gun in the world," Page said.

The last conversation the two friends had was about three months ago. Gill didn't want to talk to his former buddy any more.

"You can say we didn't click any more. He spoke to me as if I was his enemy. He had a big problem with humanity in general," Page said.

"I tried to contact him and he didn't want anything to do with it."

An autopsy yesterday showed that Gill, 25, shot himself in the head Wednesday after a police bullet wounded him in the arm.

Montreal police say they have no idea why he mowed down 18-year-old Anastasia De Sousa and injured about 20 other people.

Michel Preiss, 21, a neighbour and another rare friend of Gill, said he hadn't seen Gill for three months and "I was truly surprised to learn what he'd done."

With a group of friends, they would go to fight friendly make-believe battles in the park — something done by a strange but harmless subculture in the city.

"Kim was the least violent person I know. Even when battling, he was not aggressive," Preiss said. "I didn't know he had firearms and such a violent Internet site."

The disbelief was echoed yesterday by Gill's mother, who called her son "a good man ... Just ask anybody. Ask the neighbours. He was a good son."

She said authorities searched the home after her son's lunchtime, commando-style assault on the college and seized his computer.

"I don't know what they found in the computer," she said. "They took everything."

Gill lived with his twin brothers and parents, Gurinder Gill and Parvinder Sandu, in a raised bungalow in a middle-class, mostly English-speaking neighbourhood in Laval, just north of Montreal.

Gurinder Gill appears to own a trucking company, according to business records.

The Gills bought their white brick home in 1988 for $136,000, property records show.

From the outside, things appeared to be pretty ordinary, which is how neighbour Louise Leykuf described the family. "They did their own thing," she said yesterday glancing across the street.

Unremarkable, except maybe for Gill's penchant for black trench coats and his curly Mohawk-style haircut.

"He looked a little strange, but then there are a lot of strange people," Leykuf said.

In his online diary, Gill, using the nickname Trench, wrote that "anger and hatred simmers within me," that he disliked "the world and everything in it," and that, instead of people, he loved guns and first-person shooter video games.

Neighbours didn't see flashes of such hate but did say he wasn't too friendly.

Some long-time residents couldn't recall ever seeing him smile or a wave as he drove off in his Pontiac Sunbird.

It's not known where he worked — though his writings refer to him hating work — and a neighbour thought he'd used employment insurance to pay for the car.

The family's next-door neighbour said he didn't even know the Gill boys' names.

Preiss said he'd lost touch with "Kim" in recent years.

"I thought he was a little bit weird when I was growing up but everybody thought I was weird ... too."

Gill attended Twin Oaks Elementary School and Rosemere, where he graduated in 1998.

Gill's high-school yearbook offers few clues of a youngster headed for disaster.

There are no words beside the photo of an unsmiling, bespectacled Gill, unlike most other students who offered reminiscences and parting wishes.

Effie Maniatis, director general of Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board, said there is no record of Gill being a troublemaker nor of him excelling in academia.

"His record was an average student basically," Maniatis recalled.

Gill didn't attend Dawson College, in downtown Montreal, and had no known connection to it.

Police say he had no criminal record.

For now, people trying to understand Gill will have to make do with his online declarations.He considered himself a follower of Gothic subculture, admired Marilyn Manson, the rock star who portrays himself as the anti-Christ.

He also loathed authority figures and loved to play violent videogames, including one that simulates the Columbine massacre committed by two other social outcasts.

An image gallery contains more than 50 photos depicting the young man in various poses holding a Beretta CX4 Storm semi-automatic carbine and donning a long black trench coat and combat boots.

With files from la presse and Canadian Press