A downtown Toronto shooting that left two people dead and sent three to
hospital is tied to gangs and should not raise the anxieties of city residents,
said Mayor John Tory in a statement Sunday.
“It is important that Toronto residents understand what’s going on here,” he
said. “There is some gang activity and these acts are largely targeted. I have
spoken to Chief [Mark] Saunders … who assured me that Toronto Police is working
to gather evidence and bring the people involved in gang activity into custody
as soon as possible.”
The shooting happened just after 3 a.m. on Sunday on the west corner of Spadina Avenue and Nassau Street, on the border of
Kensington Market.
A police investigation shut down Spadina
between Dundas and College streets until
about 2:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon, leaving traffic snarled and residents and
visitors uneasy.
Earlier in the day, police union chief Mike McCormack said a halt to the practice of carding,
which allowed police officers to identify and talk to people not suspected of a
crime, is playing a role in this month’s violence. Shootings have doubled versus
last January.
Officers, Mr. McCormack
said, have stopped doing street checks while the province consults on
legislation that would tightly regulate the practice.
“The province has said we will give you direction, and our officers are
saying, ‘Okay, what is that direction?’” Mr. McCormack
said.
“Our people are saying ‘Look, we’re not investigating people like we used
to,’” he said. “Arrests are
down dramatically, violence is up dramatically, and I think the paralysis is one
of the issues that is driving those numbers.”
A draft of provincial regulations is currently making its way through the
consultation and legislative process.
The city has already had six homicides in 2016. In 2015 over all, there was
one fewer homicide than in the year prior, in keeping with a decade-long decline
in murders.
However, a spike of 70 per cent in the number of shootings has had experts
puzzled over what is to blame, from a porous border to social issues.
It’s not the first time the union president has blamed the impact of the
coming legislation on carding for the rise in shootings. He made a similar
argument in December after a spate of violence, incidents that Chief Saunders
referred to as a “blip.”
By Sunday evening, police had not released the names of any suspects in the
Kensington Market violence and were
appealing to witnesses to come forward. No names of victims will be released
until police notify the next of kin.
Residents on both sides of Spadina heard
the shots around 3:15 a.m. They said the neighbourhood can often be noisy on
weekend nights with drunk revellers. Some thought the shots were
firecrackers.
“I heard them and I thought they sounded like gunshots, but by the time I
went back to sleep I think I had decided they were firecrackers,” said Celeste,
a grandmother who was visiting her daughter and grandchild on Nassau Street.
Still, the Peterborough resident, who did not want to share her
last name, said she has come to love the neighbourhood she has visited often in
the past decade.
“I’ve always felt very comfortable here. This is a very tight community and
this is disconnected from us. It’s people coming down on the weekend,” she
said.
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