Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Grade School Boys Post Disturbing Video 'How To Kill Your Teacher', Nanaimo Schools Fail To Identify

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jan, 2015 12:20 PM
    NANAIMO, B.C. — RCMP on Vancouver Island won't be investigating an online video featuring two boys advocating violence against a teacher after finding no evidence the students are from Nanaimo, B.C.
     
    Mounties asked administrators with the Nanaimo-Ladysmith school district to probe the video, titled "How to kill your teacher," but no one could identify the boys.
     
    Const. Gary O'Brien says the six-minute video was posted to YouTube on Jan. 12 and shows two boys about the age of 10 or 11 holding toy guns and discussing how to kill a teacher referred to as Ms. D.
     
    O'Brien said the video, which had 127 views when he watched it, was "very amateurish" and has since been removed from the website. 
     
    Police were notified after the city's newspaper was contacted by a Florida radio station host who stumbled across the video, and he then found more footage by the same user featuring the Nanaimo airport.
     
     
    The Mounties have forwarded the video to Vancouver police, who have asked schools in their own district to take a look because one child is wearing a Vancouver Canucks hockey jersey.
     
    O'Brien says that while the message is disconcerting, police would have approached the situation by sitting down with the parents and their children and talking about why the behaviour was inappropriate.
     
    "Our concern would be to find out who they are, then work with the parents and try to understand why (their children) would create the video ... and be sure it doesn't happen again."
     
    O'Brien said there's still no indication where they're from.
     
    "Nobody came back saying they know who the kids are. So that more or less tells us the kids aren't in our school district," he said. "There's no active investigation."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Court upholds pardon revocation for alleged Via Rail terror plotter

    Court upholds pardon revocation for alleged Via Rail terror plotter
    TORONTO — There is no evidence of any political interference in a decision to revoke the criminal pardon of a man accused of plotting to attack a passenger train, a Federal Court judge has ruled.

    Court upholds pardon revocation for alleged Via Rail terror plotter

    Hearing Delayed For Prohibited Driver Who Killed B.C. Woman At Crosswalk

    Hearing Delayed For Prohibited Driver Who Killed B.C. Woman At Crosswalk
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A chronic prohibited driver who struck and killed a woman at a crosswalk in Kamloops, B.C., has had his appeal hearing delayed for nearly a month.

    Hearing Delayed For Prohibited Driver Who Killed B.C. Woman At Crosswalk

    Annapolis Warship To Be Sunk As Largest Artificial Reef In Vancouver Area

    Annapolis Warship To Be Sunk As Largest Artificial Reef In Vancouver Area
    The Artificial Reef Society of B.C. says the former HMCS Annapolis will be towed from Long Bay to nearby Halkett Bay on Jan. 13 before being sunk four days later.

    Annapolis Warship To Be Sunk As Largest Artificial Reef In Vancouver Area

    Crude-by-rail volumes expected to grow in 2015 despite price volatility

    Crude-by-rail volumes expected to grow in 2015 despite price volatility
    MONTREAL — Volatility in energy prices is expected to be a "wild card" for Canadian railways in the long term, but crude-by-rail volumes should continue to grow, albeit more slowly, in 2015, an industry analyst said Tuesday.

    Crude-by-rail volumes expected to grow in 2015 despite price volatility

    B.C. Students' Space Project Delayed By Oct. Rocket Crash Delayed Again

    B.C. Students' Space Project Delayed By Oct. Rocket Crash Delayed Again
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A science project dreamed up by a group of students in central British Columbia that exploded on a rocket launching pad almost two months ago is on hold again.

    B.C. Students' Space Project Delayed By Oct. Rocket Crash Delayed Again

    Deportation of imprisoned Canadian-Egyptian journalist in 'final stages': family

    Deportation of imprisoned Canadian-Egyptian journalist in 'final stages': family
    CAIRO — The family of a Canadian-Egyptian journalist imprisoned in Cairo says they have requested his deportation and were told by a senior official the process is in its "final stages."

    Deportation of imprisoned Canadian-Egyptian journalist in 'final stages': family