LA LOCHE, Sask. — As phone calls started coming in from panicked students and teachers about a shooter on the loose, RCMP sped down the street to the local high school and found its main doors blasted with holes.
Mounties say one officer quickly spotted a boy with a gun inside and chased him through the building. Within a few minutes, and without a fight, police say he surrendered.
But so much damage had already been done.
Saskatchewan RCMP say that during the eight minutes the teen was in the La Loche Community school on Friday afternoon, he shot nine people. Two staff members died.
Then they learned there were more victims.
Two brothers, one 13 and the other 17, were discovered dead in a home not far away.
On Saturday, RCMP announced that they had charged a 17-year-old suspect with four counts of first-degree murder, seven counts of attempted murder and unauthorized possession of a firearm.
He can't be named under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
Investigators could provide no motive.
"It's a significant event for Canada," RCMP Supt. Grant St. Germaine told reporters gathered in the remote Dene community. "I think it's part of changing times. What we're seeing is what appears to be more violence — and not being able to account for why."
St. Germaine said he also doesn't know if the victims were sought out or targeted at random.
MORE National ARTICLES
No Parole For Stanley Tippett, Convicted Of Attack On 12-Year-Old Ontario Girl
The Parole Board of Canada says Stanley Tippett remains "an untreated sex offender" who has not addressed his risk to reoffend.
No Parole For Stanley Tippett, Convicted Of Attack On 12-Year-Old Ontario Girl
Coding On Deck For Grade-school Students As B.C. Unveils New Curriculum
Students in British Columbia's public elementary schools are on track to become the first generation to get basic training in computer coding as the province answers a call from its thriving tech sector.
Coding On Deck For Grade-school Students As B.C. Unveils New Curriculum
Canadians' Vulnerability To Debt Set To Climb In Coming Years: Budget Office
The parliamentary budget office released a report Tuesday predicting the ratio of debt payments — including principal and interest payments — relative to disposable income will creep upwards over the next five years as interest rates rise.
Canadians' Vulnerability To Debt Set To Climb In Coming Years: Budget Office
How Canadian Lottery Odds Stack Up Against The US Powerball
Anyone with a ticket for the record-high prize last week had merely a one in more than 292 million chance to win.
How Canadian Lottery Odds Stack Up Against The US Powerball
Bank Of Canada Weighing Rate Cut To Help Cushion Commodity Punch To Economy
OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada is again facing the question of whether lowering its already-low key interest rate will help ease the pain of Canada's struggling economy.
Bank Of Canada Weighing Rate Cut To Help Cushion Commodity Punch To Economy
Manitoba Correctional Officer To Be Recognized With Lake
Rhonda Commodore was a guard at The Pas Correctional Centre when she was killed in a highway crash while transporting inmates to Dauphin in 2014.