'Dealing with a lot': Coroner's inquest into Saskatchewan mass killing set to begin
A coroner’s inquest into the mass killing on a Saskatchewan First Nation is set to begin today.
Myles Sanderson killed 11 people and injured 17 others on the James Smith Cree Nation and in the nearby village of Weldon on Sept. 4, 2022.
Sanderson, who was 32, died in police custody a few days later.
The inquest is to establish the events leading up to the killings, who died, and when and where each person was killed.
A jury can also make recommendations to prevent similar deaths.
Family seeks justice as Saskatchewan Mountie goes to trial for first-degree murder
Brett Herman thinks back fondly on his childhood, running outside his grandfather’s house in northern Saskatchewan with his younger brother chasing behind.
He describes his brother, Braden Herman, as a gentle giant who would never hurt a fly.
Brett Herman says he never would have imagined that years later, his younger brother would be killed and the accused would be a veteran police officer.
“I really don't know how to deal with this,” Brett Herman says.
Judge gives Saskatoon mother conditional sentence for abduction, forgery
A woman accused of faking her death and that of her child before they crossed the border into the United States has been given a one-year conditional sentence that she can serve in the community.
Dawn Walker was also given 18 months probation and ordered to perform 300 hours of community service. She cannot have contact with her child without supervision and must stay in Saskatchewan.
Contract talks held up RCMP team's response to Saskatchewan killings: emails
A specialized RCMP team that deals with high-risk situations was not immediately available to respond to a stabbing rampage and hunt for a mass killer in Saskatchewan because of contract negotiations, internal emails show.
Documents obtained under freedom of information laws show Ottawa’s Emergency Response Team-Special Activities Group, also known as ERT-SAG, was initially offered to help as Mounties responded the stabbing attacks on the James Smith Cree Nation and in the nearby village of Weldon on Sept. 4, 2022.
First Nation reflects on grief and healing one year after stabbing rampage
Eddie Head felt a deep pull toward his Saskatchewan First Nation as it was enveloped in devastation.
He had been a community leader for decades for James Smith Cree Nation and served a term as chief. But as he learned about the horrors of a stabbing rampage over the Labour Day weekend last year, an even more difficult connection became clear — the killer was his nephew.
"I felt obligated to come back home," Head says from the band office in the community northeast of Saskatoon.
93 areas of interest found at site of former Saskatchewan residential school
A chief in Saskatchewan says her heart is broken after ground-penetrating radar located 93 areas of interest at the site of a former residential school.
English River First Nation Chief Jenny Wolverine said it’s believed 79 of the areas of interest at the Beauval Indian Residential School could be the size of possible children’s graves and 14 could be the size of ones for infants.
"It breaks my heart that there's likely more, or even that there's even one," Wolverine said Tuesday in Saskatoon.
"The experience of residential school is horrific."
Charity thanks victims' families for food, clothing after deadly bus crash
The legacies of some of the 16 seniors killed in a bus crash are living on in a western Manitoba community, as their clothing and leftover food are donated to those in need.
“It’s a huge benefit from the loss that has happened to the help that it brings other people,” said Wayne Olson, a community minister for the Church of Christ in Dauphin, Man.
“That’s a tremendously amazing thing when you think about the big picture of things, how what they have now will help many other people.”
Canadian forest fire centre responds to unprecedented wildfire season
Weather maps hang on the walls and precipitation reports flash across screens in the Winnipeg office where major decisions about Canada’s battle against an unprecedented wildfire season are made.
Inside the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre headquarters in Manitoba’s capital, just east of the exact longitudinal centre of Canada, there are discussions on how best to battle blazes from coast to coast.
“It's definitely an unprecedented season," Jennifer Kamau, communications manager for the centre, said Tuesday.
'We are in a crisis': Red Dress Day honoured as leaders say more work to be done
The head of the Native Women’s Association of Canada says it’s clear there's an ongoing emergency nearly four years after the final report into missing and murdered Indigenous woman and girls was released.
“We are in a crisis,” said Carol McBride.
Red dresses are set to be on display across the country Friday to recognize the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and Two-Spirit People. It has become known as Red Dress Day and the empty garments serve as a symbol of lives that have been lost.
'Learn to live with this:' Humboldt focuses on future five years after bus crash
Kevin Garinger says it feels like the passage of time is inexplicable. The five years since a deadly bus crash changed his city, his hockey team and his life sometimes feel like a lifetime. Other times it feels like yesterday.
"I don't know if anyone ever heals from significant loss or tragedy,” Garinger says after a moment of deep thought in his Humboldt, Sask., office.
“You eventually just learn to live with this."