Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2015 12:26 PM
    WESTASKIWIN, Alta. — The trial for a man charged with attempted murder in the shooting of two Mounties in rural Alberta has begun with him pleading not guilty.
     
    Sawyer Robison (SOY'-yuhr ROH'-bih-son) has also told a judge he is not guilty of assault causing bodily harm and four weapons-related charges.
     
    Robison, who is 30, was arrested following a standoff on his family's farm near Killam, southeast of Edmonton, in 2012.
     
    An RCMP forensics officer was the first to testify about numerous guns and fired bullets discovered in a home on the property.
     
    Cpl. Christine Bramhoff said seven guns, including a sniper rifle, and a United States army sniper training book were found in a bedroom with mail belonging to Robison.
     
    Two handguns were also lying on the kitchen floor beside the naked body of a dead man.
     
    Robison had also been charged with second-degree murder in the death of his uncle, Brad Clarke, but that charge was discontinued during a preliminary hearing.
     
    The shooting shocked several residents of the area, who said it was hard to believe such a friendly farm family could be at the centre of such trouble. They described Robison as a quiet photographer and musician.
     
    Few details of the shooting have been made public, but RCMP said at the time that a domestic violence assault led four officers to search for an illegal handgun on the Robison farm on Feb. 7, 2012.
     
    Two Mounties walked into a house on the property and shots were fired. Constables Sheldon Shah and Sidney Gaudette were hit but managed to get out of the home and were taken to hospital.
     
    Officers began a search for Robison, who they alleged had been in the home at the time of the shooting and fled in a pickup truck.
     
    RCMP credited an emotional public plea by Robison's parents with his peaceful arrest three days later on a country road in the same area as his family's farm.
     
    Shah and Gaudette, whose fathers were both Mounties, had started their careers in the force at the Killam detachment. They spent several months recovering from their wounds and later returned to work.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Tables Balanced Budget As It Aims To Slice Its Massive Debt

    Quebec will post a balanced budget this year and tightly control government spending as the province aims to slice its massive debt over the next decade, says Finance Minister Carlos Leitao.

    Quebec Tables Balanced Budget As It Aims To Slice Its Massive Debt

    'Absolutely' Confident: TSB Investigator Says Canadian Flights Are Safe

    'Absolutely' Confident: TSB Investigator Says Canadian Flights Are Safe
    VANCOUVER — The chief aviation investigator for the federal transport watchdog says he's absolutely confident in the safety records of Canadian airlines and the psychological testing administered to their pilots.

    'Absolutely' Confident: TSB Investigator Says Canadian Flights Are Safe

    Ontario Woman's 'Kitty, Kitty' Video Of Encounter With Lynx Draws Awe, Ridicule

    Ontario Woman's 'Kitty, Kitty' Video Of Encounter With Lynx Draws Awe, Ridicule
    This could be the ultimate cat video. A northern Ontario woman who came upon a wild lynx outside her shop captured the encounter on video and posted it to YouTube, drawing both awe and ridicule from online commentators.

    Ontario Woman's 'Kitty, Kitty' Video Of Encounter With Lynx Draws Awe, Ridicule

    Toronto-Area Woman Who Injected Silicone Into Customer's Butts Sentenced To 8 Years In Prison

    Toronto-Area Woman Who Injected Silicone Into Customer's Butts Sentenced To 8 Years In Prison
    TORONTO — A woman who injected industrial silicone into the buttocks of customers as an illegal cosmetic procedure has been sentenced to eight years in prison.

    Toronto-Area Woman Who Injected Silicone Into Customer's Butts Sentenced To 8 Years In Prison

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Feared He Would Be 'Taken Out' By Undercover Officer: Trial

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Feared He Would Be 'Taken Out' By Undercover Officer: Trial
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court jury has heard that an accused terrorist worried for his life and brought along a hidden weapon to meet with a man he thought was helping him in his terror plot.

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Feared He Would Be 'Taken Out' By Undercover Officer: Trial

    No Charges For Vancouver Police Officer Involved In Crash With Motorcyclist

    VICTORIA — No charges will be laid against a Vancouver police officer involved in a crash with a motorcyclist last August. The man on the motorcycle broke his arm when his bike ran into the side of the police car.

    No Charges For Vancouver Police Officer Involved In Crash With Motorcyclist