Wednesday, June 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Killer in Eaton Centre shooting says he was only there at girlfriend's urging

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Nov, 2014 12:19 PM

    TORONTO — The man who shot and killed two people in a crowded food court testified on Tuesday that he was only in the downtown mall at his girlfriend's urging.

    He didn't want to go that Saturday evening, Christopher Husbands said, because an attack that almost killed him several months earlier had left him paranoid and wary of crowds.

    "I was still having nightmares. I was still having flashbacks," Husbands told the jury.

    The prosecution maintains the mall gunfire that also injured five people and sparked panic was a planned and deliberate revenge shooting. Husbands, who has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder, denies that.

    He said he was only at the Eaton Centre because his girlfriend wanted to visit a sports store.

    After she bought ice skates and he bought roller blades and a jacket, they went to the busy food court to meet her mother for something to eat.

    "I was agitated. I was losing patience. I wanted to get out of there," Husbands said.

    Husbands, 25, told Ontario Superior court that he believed a group of men who had attacked him in February 2012 and left him in a pool of blood meant to kill him.

    He said he had no idea what prompted the attack but said he was convinced they would try to finish the job.

    "They'd do whatever they have to do to shut me up. I was worried for my life."

    Testifying in his own defence for a second day, Husbands said he had a gun with him when he went to the landmark mall in June 2012 because it made him feel safer. A friend, he said, had given him the weapon a day earlier to look after.

    Among those who had taken part in the February attack was Nixon Nirmalendran, 22, one of two men Husbands would later kill in the food court.

    Husbands and Nirmalendran had known each other for years and had been friends but the relationship deteriorated.

    "At one point, Nixon was a very nice guy. He just went from getting bullied to not wanting to get bullied so bad that he became very aggressive," Husbands told the jury.

    "He just needed to let everyone know 'I have a gun and I can shoot that gun'."

    Husbands said he tried to distance himself after Nirmalendran admitted to killing a man in 2008 but was afraid to just cut him off completely.

    Nor did he tell police that Nirmalendran had admitted the shooting.

    "You don't talk," he said under questioning from his lawyer, Dirk Derstine.

    Following the February 2012 stabbing, Husbands said he was constantly on edge, started drinking more heavily and using crack cocaine, and began looking to carry a gun for protection.

    "I just wanted to be safe," he said.

    Before the mall shooting, court heard, he had only fired a weapon a few times — at a gun range.

    He also said he had reached out to Nirmalendran through intermediaries to try to sort matters out.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    BC Court Rules Part Of Dangerous-offender Scheme Violates Charter

    BC Court Rules Part Of Dangerous-offender Scheme Violates Charter
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. judge has ruled the Conservative government's changes to the dangerous-offender regime violate the charter, but it's not yet clear whether the law will be struck down.

    BC Court Rules Part Of Dangerous-offender Scheme Violates Charter

    Man Fatally Dead Shot Dead by Vancouver Police Identified

    Man Fatally Dead Shot Dead by Vancouver Police Identified
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. Coroners Service has identified a man who was fatally shot during an encounter with Vancouver police.

    Man Fatally Dead Shot Dead by Vancouver Police Identified

    Short-term Action Required In Mount Polley Tailings Pond Clean-up: Government

    Short-term Action Required In Mount Polley Tailings Pond Clean-up: Government
    WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. — A government progress report into a voluminous wastewater spill at a south-central B.C. gold and copper mine calls for quick completion of human health and environmental risk assessments.

    Short-term Action Required In Mount Polley Tailings Pond Clean-up: Government

    Hockey legend Pat Quinn remembered as a straight shooter with a heart of gold

    Hockey legend Pat Quinn remembered as a straight shooter with a heart of gold
    On the ice, behind the bench and behind his desk, Pat Quinn was an imposing figure.

    Hockey legend Pat Quinn remembered as a straight shooter with a heart of gold

    City, police sites in Ottawa hacked amid claims teen suspect is being framed

    City, police sites in Ottawa hacked amid claims teen suspect is being framed
    OTTAWA — A statement posted online says attacks on the Ottawa police website are in retaliation for what it claims are police efforts to frame an innocent teen.

    City, police sites in Ottawa hacked amid claims teen suspect is being framed

    NewLink Genetics gets some big league help on Ebola vaccine, enlists Merck

    NewLink Genetics gets some big league help on Ebola vaccine, enlists Merck
    TORONTO — The small American company developing a made-in-Canada Ebola vaccine has just received some major league help.

    NewLink Genetics gets some big league help on Ebola vaccine, enlists Merck