Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Report Into Fatal Abbotsford School Stabbing Released

The Canadian Press, 23 Jun, 2017 11:56 AM
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — A British Columbia school district is making 31 recommendations to improve security after a fatal stabbing last year at a secondary school in Abbotsford.
     
     
    A report by the Abbotsford School District says the lack of separation between a public library and a school library may pose a risk to students. 
     
     
    It calls for some sort of physical barrier between the two libraries in Abbotsford, which is 70 kilometres east of Vancouver.
     
     
    The report examines a stabbing last November that killed one student and critically injured a second at Abbotsford Senior Secondary.
     
     
    Written by two officials with the district, it also urges a review of cellphone reception in all Abbotsford schools after the critically injured student took refuge in a locked computer lab but others inside could not call for help because the room had no phone, cell or intercom service.
     
     
    The officials say communication must be improved with third parties, such as the Fraser Valley Regional Library, whose operations can have an effect on operations at the school, noting that incidents at the library are not routinely reported to school officials.
     
     
     
    "School district staff have reported that public library patrons have been known to been found eating, sleeping and taking refuge from the outdoors in the library," says the report, written by district secretary-treasurer Ray Velestuk and assistant-Supt. Angus MacKay.
     
     
    "It has also been reported that homeless shelters send their clients to the public library for free access to resources including Internet access."
     
     
    They have called for an update by June 30, 2018, on progress related to the 31 recommendations.
     
     
    Police described the attack on the two girls in Grade 9 as random.
     
     
    The report says a man entered the school through the adjoining public library.
     
     
    Gabriel Klein, who was 21 at the time of his arrest and of no fixed address, was charged with one count of second-degree murder and one count of aggravated assault in the death of 13-year-old Letisha Reimer and the injuries to the second girl, who can't be identified because of a publication ban.
     
     
    The report says no one could have anticipated or prepared for the stabbing. It praises staff and others at the school for their decisive response.
     
     
     
     
    "Without regard for their own personal safety, staff acted quickly, brought a violent attack to a stop, and immediately provided medical care to the wounded students."
     
     
    It says staff members and some students are to be "commended for their exemplary actions, and serve as an inspiration to everyone in the Abbotsford School District."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Campus Police Searching For Python On The Loose At The University Of Guelph

    Campus Police Searching For Python On The Loose At The University Of Guelph
    GUELPH, Ont. — Campus police at an Ontario university say they're searching for a snake believed to be loose in a building that houses the school's administration offices, cafeteria and food court.

    Campus Police Searching For Python On The Loose At The University Of Guelph

    Shopify Defends Decision To Keep Hosting Breitbart Store, Emphasizes Free Speech

    Shopify's CEO is defending the e-commerce company's decision to keep hosting an online store for the controversial right-wing U.S. media organization Breitbart News.

    Shopify Defends Decision To Keep Hosting Breitbart Store, Emphasizes Free Speech

    Syrian Student, Embraced By Canada, Opts For U.s. After Trump Order Halted

    Syrian Student, Embraced By Canada, Opts For U.s. After Trump Order Halted
    Canada became a brief beacon of hope for Alaa Alsabeh of Syria after his plan to study engineering in Michigan was shattered by Donald Trump's executive order banning nationals from seven countries, including his.

    Syrian Student, Embraced By Canada, Opts For U.s. After Trump Order Halted

    Traffic Between B.C.'s South Coast And Interior Cut In The Wake Of Winter Storm

    Traffic Between B.C.'s South Coast And Interior Cut In The Wake Of Winter Storm
      Many travellers spent a frigid night trapped on Highway 5, the Coquihalla Highway, when that busy route was shut down by icy conditions and several collisions.

    Traffic Between B.C.'s South Coast And Interior Cut In The Wake Of Winter Storm

    New $3.5 Billion Bridge To Replace Massey Tunnel Gets Environmental Nod From B.C. Government

    New $3.5 Billion Bridge To Replace Massey Tunnel Gets Environmental Nod From B.C. Government
    The approval comes with 33 conditions that are legally binding requirements that the Transportation Ministry must meet.

    New $3.5 Billion Bridge To Replace Massey Tunnel Gets Environmental Nod From B.C. Government

    Fentanyl-Laced Cocaine Suspected In Death And Overdose On Ontario Reserve

    Fentanyl-Laced Cocaine Suspected In Death And Overdose On Ontario Reserve
    Police on a First Nations reserve in southwestern Ontario are investigating whether cocaine laced with fentanyl is behind the death of a man and the overdose of another earlier this week.

    Fentanyl-Laced Cocaine Suspected In Death And Overdose On Ontario Reserve