Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Father says 11-year-old boy felt safe with dogs before deadly attack in Edmonton home

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2024 10:20 AM
  • Father says 11-year-old boy felt safe with dogs before deadly attack in Edmonton home

The father of an 11-year-old boy killed in a dog attack in an Edmonton home says he never saw the two animals act aggressively towards people and saw no sign he should be worried.

Wesley Grist told reporters Sunday his son, Kache Grist, was comfortable with the pets and had often cuddled with them on the couch. 

"He loved them," said Wesley Grist, who held a news conference at a city restaurant.

Kache, who lived in Osoyoos, B.C., was visiting his father in Edmonton. Grist said the large dogs belonged to his roommate, and they have since been euthanized.

The father said he doesn't know what sparked last week's attack, since he was in the garage fixing a tire at the time. He said he'd left his son alone for no longer than ten minutes.

"When I walked in, I thought I heard the dogs making a commotion. I saw a mess, and I didn't know what I was looking at. I was just walking across the kitchen when I found him," he said.

"My world went from being happy, loving, hugging my son, and ten minutes later my world was completely ripped apart. My heart was crushed."

"Nobody wants to see any child like that. But to have to be a parent and find your child like that, it's the hardest thing I've been through in my whole life."

Grist said his only son was kind, sensitive and loving.

Edmonton police said Thursday an autopsy confirmed the boy died from a dog bite.

Police said the medical examiner continues to investigate the manner of death but did not say whether the dogs’ owner would be charged. The medical examiner can classify manner of death as natural, accidental, homicide, suicide or undetermined.

Beware of Dog signs were posted at the home, and neighbours have said the animals were a danger and a nuisance. 

The city has said animal control was called about two previous attacks at the home. There had also been numerous barking complaints in the past year.

Grist said one of those attacks involved a person who was actively playing with the dogs. He did not know the details of the other attack.

He said Kache was close with the Edmonton roommate, and the boy affectionately called her "aunty." He said his son hugged her and told her he loved her when he arrived for his visit.

"She loved my son, she's grieving his loss too."

The father said the public attention about the attack has resulted in threats to his roommate and kept him from properly being able to grieve as the family prepares for a funeral.

"Stop with all this finger pointing -- it's unnecessary, and it's not honouring who my son was," Grist said, adding he wants Kache to be remembered for not being an angry person or holding grudges.

"He would be upset with how this has all blown up -- all the anger and finger pointing and blame. He'd want everybody to just be happy and getting along, because that's who he was.

"He was just the most caring, sweet, considerate, empathetic -- he was just perfect." 

Edmonton Mayor Amarjeet Sohi has said the city would review previous calls and complaints about the dogs and see if there were any gaps in response.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada embarks on preclearance pilot project on U.S. side of Quebec/N.Y. land border

Canada embarks on preclearance pilot project on U.S. side of Quebec/N.Y. land border
The Canada Border Services Agency hopes to launch the two-year project later this year to determine whether similar setups could replace smaller, aging facilities on the Canadian side of the border.  The project carries a price tag of $7.4 million, money that was allocated in the 2021 federal budget. 

Canada embarks on preclearance pilot project on U.S. side of Quebec/N.Y. land border

Income gap between new immigrants and all Canadians shrunk by half in four years: PBO

Income gap between new immigrants and all Canadians shrunk by half in four years: PBO
A new report from the parliamentary budget officer finds the gap between the average incomes of new immigrants and all tax filers has narrowed significantly. The report finds the median income of new immigrants was about 78 per cent of the median income made by all tax filers in 2018, compared with 55 per cent in 2014.

Income gap between new immigrants and all Canadians shrunk by half in four years: PBO

Canada doesn't support 'premise' of South Africa's case against Israel at world court

Canada doesn't support 'premise' of South Africa's case against Israel at world court
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada supports the International Court of Justice but that doesn't mean Canada supports the premise of South Africa's genocide case against Israel. On Thursday, South Africa launched a case at the top United Nations court arguing Israel's bombardment of Gaza and its siege on the Palestinians who live there "are genocidal in character."

Canada doesn't support 'premise' of South Africa's case against Israel at world court

Extreme cold: -40C forecast in Edmonton as snow causes road havoc in Metro Vancouver

Extreme cold: -40C forecast in Edmonton as snow causes road havoc in Metro Vancouver
Extreme cold and biting wind has gripped Western Canada, breaking multiple decades-long daily temperature records in Alberta and British Columbia. Environment Canada says Edmonton's temperature is -36.6 C and forecast to hit -40 C tonight on one of the coldest days in half a century, after plummeting to -34.6 C on the coldest Jan. 11 since 1997.

Extreme cold: -40C forecast in Edmonton as snow causes road havoc in Metro Vancouver

BC gets 5 new Indigenous Justice Centres

BC gets 5 new Indigenous Justice Centres
Premier David Eby says five new Indigenous Justice Centres set up in B-C over the past year will help make the legal system work better for Indigenous people. Eby says a total of nine centres across the province will connect more people with culturally safe legal supports and services.

BC gets 5 new Indigenous Justice Centres

RCMP looking for erratic driver

RCMP looking for erratic driver
The R-C-M-P say they are trying to find a 24-year-old man suspected of driving dangerously through Surrey’s streets during peak traffic hours. Police say officers conducted a traffic stop on a 2017 white Range Rover on September 7th for dangerous driving. 

RCMP looking for erratic driver