Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

No Evidence Linking ISIS To Deadly Toronto Shooting By Faisal Hussain, Police Chief Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jul, 2018 11:07 AM
    TORONTO — There's no evidence to support a claim from the Islamic State terror group that it was behind a deadly shooting spree in Toronto, the city's police chief said Wednesday as the federal government reiterated that there was no national security connection to the gunman.
     
     
    Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders said his force was investigating Sunday's violence from every angle and had found nothing to indicate a connection to the group commonly known as ISIL.
     
     
    A post on one of the group's social media channels claimed one of its "soldiers" wielded the gun that killed two and injured 13 on a busy stretch of Danforth Avenue. ISIL claimed the attack was in response to its calls to target citizens of the U.S-led coalition battling it. The claim was repeated by a security member of the group speaking to its Amaq news agency.
     
     
    Saunders, however, issued a sharp denial.
     
     
     
     
    "At this stage, we have no evidence to support these claims," he said in a statement, adding that Toronto police would continue to "explore every investigative avenue" in its probe, which includes examining how the shooter obtained a gun.
     
     
    A spokeswoman for federal public safety minister Ralph Goodale echoed Saunders' assertions, saying currently "there is no national security nexus" to the man behind the attack.
     
     
    Faisal Hussain, 29, who died of a gunshot wound shortly after the shooting, was also not on any federal watchlists associated with national security, Goodale has said.
     
     
    Hussain's parents have said their son had severe mental health issues all his life and had not responded to treatment. Neighbours have said Hussain had a supportive family and did not show outward signs of mental illness.
     
     
    Saunders said police will be interviewing those who knew Hussain, reviewing his online activity and "looking into his experiences with mental health."
     
     
     
     
    Shortly after Saunders' statement was issued, Toronto Mayor John Tory urged residents to have confidence in what police are saying.
     
     
    "People should rely on the information that is going to be forthcoming over time, including today, from the Toronto Police Service," he said. "They're the people who are in possession of the information that would lead to any conclusions."
     
     
    Ten-year-old Julianna Kozis of Markham, Ont., and 18-year-old Reese Fallon of Toronto were killed in the shooting.
     
     
    The Markham Synchro Club issued a statement saying Julianna had been one of the club's artistic swimmers.
     
     
    "Julianna was a beautiful, aspiring athlete who was in her third year in our sport," said the statement, which urged people to join them in sending thoughts and prayers to her family. "This is a traumatic event for many of us and we are committed to working through this in a thoughtful and responsive manner.,"
     
     
     
     
    Fallon, who recently graduated from a nearby high school, was preparing to study nursing at McMaster University starting in the fall. She was described by family as smart and passionate also held a job at an east-end Loblaw's store, where she worked alongside her friend Samantha Price, the company said. Friends have said that Price was among those injured in the shooting.
     
     
    Loblaw's has also confirmed that Hussain worked for the company as a part-time employee.
     
     
    The violence in Greektown added urgency to a series of gun control motions that came before Toronto City Council on Tuesday. The Danforth shooting marked the latest in a spike of gun-related deaths in the city and prompted Tory to question why anyone in the city needed to own a gun at all.
     
     
     
     
    Councillors approved a motion to urge the federal government to forbid the sale of handguns in the city and for the province to outlaw the sale of handgun ammunition in Toronto. Council also agreed to implement more stringent measures to prevent someone who has suffered from mental illness or been involved in domestic violence from obtaining a gun.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sexual Abuse At Canadian Schools Largely Perpetrated By Employees: Report

    Sexual Abuse At Canadian Schools Largely Perpetrated By Employees: Report
    Canadian Centre for Child Protection is calling for more transparency after a new report found school employees were responsible for 750 alleged sexual offences involving students.

    Sexual Abuse At Canadian Schools Largely Perpetrated By Employees: Report

    Another Chinese Student Extorted In So-called Virtual Kidnapping In Vancouver

    Another Chinese Student Extorted In So-called Virtual Kidnapping In Vancouver
    Vancouver police say a student from China has fallen victim to a so-called virtual kidnapping scheme, the third reported in the city this year.

    Another Chinese Student Extorted In So-called Virtual Kidnapping In Vancouver

    Groups Want Probe Into Vancouver Police Carding, Citing Racial Profiling

    Groups Want Probe Into Vancouver Police Carding, Citing Racial Profiling
    Indigenous and civil rights groups have asked British Columbia's police complaints commissioner to investigate a significant racial disparity in the Vancouver Police Department's use of street checks.

    Groups Want Probe Into Vancouver Police Carding, Citing Racial Profiling

    Stabbing At Surrey's Sheraton Hotel Sends 1 To Hospital With Serious Injuries

    Stabbing At Surrey's Sheraton Hotel Sends 1 To Hospital With Serious Injuries
    Surrey RCMP are investigating a stabbing incident that took place at Sheraton Vancouver Guildford hotel on the 104 Avenue

    Stabbing At Surrey's Sheraton Hotel Sends 1 To Hospital With Serious Injuries

    'WAKE UP, SURREY' Rally Calls For An End To Drug And Gang Violence

    'WAKE UP, SURREY' Rally Calls For An End To Drug And Gang Violence
    Thousands turned out in Surrey, B.C., Wednesday night for a rally against gun and gang violence.

    'WAKE UP, SURREY' Rally Calls For An End To Drug And Gang Violence

    Maxime Bernier's Lack Of Loyalty, Not Supply Management, Behind His Job Loss: Andrew Scheer

    Maxime Bernier's Lack Of Loyalty, Not Supply Management, Behind His Job Loss: Andrew Scheer
    OTTAWA — Quebec MP Maxime Bernier says the controversial book chapter that cost him his job in the Conservative shadow cabinet has been available on his website for weeks.

    Maxime Bernier's Lack Of Loyalty, Not Supply Management, Behind His Job Loss: Andrew Scheer