Canada shooting: Toronto police officer killed in ‘ambush’ gun attack; suspect also shot dead

TORONTO (Canada), Sept 13 (NNN-AGENCIES) — A 22-year Toronto police veteran was fatally shot in an “ambush attack” and the suspect is dead, with shooting scenes spanning three Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area cities Monday afternoon that left a third person dead and three others injured.

Const. Andrew Hong, 48, of the traffic services division is survived by his wife, two children and his parents, Toronto Police Chief James Ramer said.

“This is devastating news for his family and for all members of the Toronto Police Service and our entire policing community,” Ramer said at a Monday night press conference.

“We will lean on each other while we work to support Const. Hong’s family and each other in our grief.”

Hong was in Mississauga, Ontario, Monday for a training session and was on his lunch break, when he was shot at close range, police said.

“He was shot in an unprovoked — and may I say in an ambush — attack and succumbed to his injuries,” Peel Police Chief Nishan Duraiappah said at the joint press conference.

Hong died at the scene, Ramer said.

That shooting, which police say left a second person with “life-altering injuries,” was the first of several apparently connected scenes.

Halton Regional Police say they believe the same suspect was responsible for a shooting at an auto body shop less than an hour later at a Milton, Ont., auto body shop that left one person dead, one in critical condition and another in serious condition.

The suspect then fled the scene in Halton Region and was found in Hamilton, Duraiappah said.

Halton police said they had a suspect “in custody,” but Hamilton Police Chief Frank Bergen later said the suspect was shot and pronounced dead in the Hamilton Cemetery.

“The person who has been taken into custody has been pronounced (dead) and there is no outstanding suspect at this time,” Bergen said at a separate press conference Monday evening.

The suspect’s identity has not been released.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford tweeted after Hong was identified by Toronto police.

“May Constable Andrew Hong rest in peace. A husband, father and hero, he and his loved ones are in my prayers,” he said.

Toronto Mayor John Tory said his thoughts are with Hong’s family.

Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie offered her condolences to the families of the victims, calling the shootings an “unimaginable tragedy.”

“Like many residents across Mississauga, Toronto and Milton, I am in utter shock and devastated in light of today’s deadly gun attacks that claimed several lives and others in life-threatening condition…My thoughts are with the victims in hospital and their families, and I pray for their quick and full recovery,” she said in a statement. — NNN-AGENCIES

administrator

Related Articles