Wednesday, April 29, 2026
ADVT 
National

Tumbler Ridge, B.C., families sue Altman and OpenAI over shooting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2026 09:17 AM
  • Tumbler Ridge, B.C., families sue Altman and OpenAI over shooting

Victims and their families in the mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., earlier this year have filed a wrongful-death lawsuit in California against OpenAI and founder Sam Altman.

In court documents provided by lawyers representing seven people affected by the Feb. 10 shooting, the plaintiffs also accuse the artificial intelligence company and their founder of failing to warn authorities and aiding and abetting the shooting, among other allegations.

Among the plaintiffs is 12-year-old Maya Gebala, who was shot in the head and gravely injured, and the father of Abel Mwansa Jr., also 12, who was killed.

Altman apologized last week because OpenAI didn't go to police last year when staff identified troubling online behaviour by 18-year-old shooter Jesse Van Rootselaar, who months later shot eight people dead, before killing herself.

Law firm Rice Parsons Leoni & Elliott LLP says the plaintiffs decided to pursue the lawsuit in California partially because of caps placed on damages for pain and suffering in Canadian courts.

The firm says in a statement that the largest punitive damages award in Canadian history was $1.5 million.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey & White Rock Women in Business Awards Celebrate Local Leaders and Changemakers

Surrey & White Rock Women in Business Awards Celebrate Local Leaders and Changemakers
Hosted by the Surrey & White Rock Board of Trade and presented by National Bank, the annual luncheon highlighted leadership, innovation, and community contributions from women entrepreneurs, executives, and changemakers in Surrey and White Rock.

Surrey & White Rock Women in Business Awards Celebrate Local Leaders and Changemakers

B.C. guide fined $12,000 for falsifying documents, exceeding fishing limits

B.C. guide fined $12,000 for falsifying documents, exceeding fishing limits
A British Columbia fishing guide has been fined $12,000 for exceeding his catch limits, then falsifying documents in an attempt to evade detection during an inspection.

B.C. guide fined $12,000 for falsifying documents, exceeding fishing limits

Canada Post beginning work to end most door-to-door mail delivery

Canada Post beginning work to end most door-to-door mail delivery
Canada Post is starting preliminary work to convert addresses that receive door-to-door mail to community mailboxes, and to phase out some post offices.

Canada Post beginning work to end most door-to-door mail delivery

Poilievre blasts Carney, Liberal economic record in Canadian Club speech

Poilievre blasts Carney, Liberal economic record in Canadian Club speech
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says Prime Minister Mark Carney has not delivered on his economic promises after more than a year in office.

Poilievre blasts Carney, Liberal economic record in Canadian Club speech

Privacy Commissioner says stronger data laws needed as Canada readies for Chinese EVs

Privacy Commissioner says stronger data laws needed as Canada readies for Chinese EVs
Canada's privacy commissioner says he hopes laws around private sector data sharing are strengthened as the federal government prepares to open the domestic market to Chinese electric vehicles.

Privacy Commissioner says stronger data laws needed as Canada readies for Chinese EVs

Alberta's governing UCP to revisit proposed riding changes before next election

Alberta's governing UCP to revisit proposed riding changes before next election
Alberta's governing United Conservatives are looking to take another run at redrawing provincial riding boundaries – a move the Opposition NDP calls a cynical backdoor scheme to rig the October 2027 general election.

Alberta's governing UCP to revisit proposed riding changes before next election