FBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer
2020-04-25 19:31:35 UTC
Excerpt:
"Several mass murders in Canada have been rooted in grievances against
women."
If the same crime is committed by a non-white, the whole world would
have hated the mass shooter's race, religion and ethnicity.
Western White Christians were NEVER CIVILIZED, they are the same blood
thirsty barbarians today as they have been their entire existence.
They "merely cunningly and deceptively programmed everybody to THINK
that whites are civilized", SO WHITES CAN GET AWAY WITH EVERY CRIME
AGAINST NON-WHITES.
I can read White Christian DNA and modus operandi like a newspaper.
====================================================================
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/canadas-deadliest-shooting-rampage-began-with-an-argument-between-the-gunman-and-his-girlfriend-police-say/2020/04/24/fe3361e6-8636-11ea-81a3-9690c9881111_story.html
Canada’s deadliest shooting rampage began with an argument between the
gunman and his girlfriend, police say
By
Amanda Coletta
April 24, 2020 at 10:01 a.m. PDT
TORONTO — Canada's deadliest mass shooting began with the gunman's
assault of his girlfriend, who escaped, hid in the woods overnight and
emerged in the morning with information crucial to stopping him, police
said Friday.
Darren Campbell, a superintendent with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
in Nova Scotia, said the assault and escape were a “significant
incident” that could have been the “catalyst” for Gabriel Wortman’s
nearly 14-hour rampage in the eastern province last weekend. But he said
he was not discounting that it was premeditated.
The details emerged as investigators for the first time laid out a
specific timeline of the attack, which ended with 23 people dead,
including an RCMP officer and the gunman, several structures in flames
and 16 crime scenes.
Police have said that Wortman, who carried out part of the attack
dressed in an authentic police uniform while driving a sophisticated
mock-up of an RCMP vehicle, acted alone. But they were investigating
whether anyone assisted him before the rampage.
Campbell said the 51-year-old denturist had a handgun and several
long-barreled guns. One of the guns has been traced to Canada, while the
others were traced to the United States. Police were investigating how
he obtained them.
The attack began the night of April 18 in the town of Portapique, where
Wortman owned a residence. Campbell said officers arrived and found a
man who said he had been driving when he was shot by someone in what
resembled a police car. Police found several homes and cars on fire,
including Wortman’s, and dead bodies inside and outside residences.
The next morning, Wortman’s girlfriend emerged from the woods and
provided police with detailed information about him, including that he
was wearing a police uniform and driving a mock-up RCMP vehicle, police
said.
In the hours that followed, Wortman continued his murderous rampage. He
set homes on fire and shot and killed a woman out for her morning walk,
as well as drivers he pulled over. Police said some of the victims were
known to him, while others were targeted at random.
At some point, he removed the police uniform and drove to a gas station
in Enfield, where he was fatally shot by a police officer who was
refueling his vehicle.
The RCMP faced criticism this week for its response to the attack and
questions about how Wortman could have evaded officers for nearly 14 hours.
“I’ve been a police officer for almost 30 years now, and I can’t imagine
any more horrific set of circumstances [than] when you’re trying to
search for someone that looks like you,” Campbell said.
The police have also been condemned for tweeting information on the
attack as it was unfolding instead of sending it through an emergency
alert system that would have transmitted warnings to cellphones, radios
and televisions. Some of the families and friends of the victims said
the alert system might have saved lives.
Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil said officials asked the RCMP whether
it wanted to use the system. Police said they were preparing to use it
when the gunman was shot and killed.
As police searched for the suspect on the morning of April 19, they also
shot at a firehouse where people who left their homes because of the
rampage were being housed. The incident is now being investigated by a
provincial civilian police watchdog.
Several mass murders in Canada have been rooted in grievances against women.
The country’s previous deadliest mass shooting was in 1989, when a
gunman killed 14 women and himself at Montreal’s Ecole Polytechnique. In
a suicide note, he expressed his hatred for “feminists.”
In 2018, a man killed 10 people in a van attack on a busy Toronto
thoroughfare. He later told police he was “radicalized” online, where he
found a community of like-minded misogynistic men who refer to
themselves as incels, or involuntary celibate men, and denigrate women.
"Several mass murders in Canada have been rooted in grievances against
women."
If the same crime is committed by a non-white, the whole world would
have hated the mass shooter's race, religion and ethnicity.
Western White Christians were NEVER CIVILIZED, they are the same blood
thirsty barbarians today as they have been their entire existence.
They "merely cunningly and deceptively programmed everybody to THINK
that whites are civilized", SO WHITES CAN GET AWAY WITH EVERY CRIME
AGAINST NON-WHITES.
I can read White Christian DNA and modus operandi like a newspaper.
====================================================================
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/canadas-deadliest-shooting-rampage-began-with-an-argument-between-the-gunman-and-his-girlfriend-police-say/2020/04/24/fe3361e6-8636-11ea-81a3-9690c9881111_story.html
Canada’s deadliest shooting rampage began with an argument between the
gunman and his girlfriend, police say
By
Amanda Coletta
April 24, 2020 at 10:01 a.m. PDT
TORONTO — Canada's deadliest mass shooting began with the gunman's
assault of his girlfriend, who escaped, hid in the woods overnight and
emerged in the morning with information crucial to stopping him, police
said Friday.
Darren Campbell, a superintendent with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
in Nova Scotia, said the assault and escape were a “significant
incident” that could have been the “catalyst” for Gabriel Wortman’s
nearly 14-hour rampage in the eastern province last weekend. But he said
he was not discounting that it was premeditated.
The details emerged as investigators for the first time laid out a
specific timeline of the attack, which ended with 23 people dead,
including an RCMP officer and the gunman, several structures in flames
and 16 crime scenes.
Police have said that Wortman, who carried out part of the attack
dressed in an authentic police uniform while driving a sophisticated
mock-up of an RCMP vehicle, acted alone. But they were investigating
whether anyone assisted him before the rampage.
Campbell said the 51-year-old denturist had a handgun and several
long-barreled guns. One of the guns has been traced to Canada, while the
others were traced to the United States. Police were investigating how
he obtained them.
The attack began the night of April 18 in the town of Portapique, where
Wortman owned a residence. Campbell said officers arrived and found a
man who said he had been driving when he was shot by someone in what
resembled a police car. Police found several homes and cars on fire,
including Wortman’s, and dead bodies inside and outside residences.
The next morning, Wortman’s girlfriend emerged from the woods and
provided police with detailed information about him, including that he
was wearing a police uniform and driving a mock-up RCMP vehicle, police
said.
In the hours that followed, Wortman continued his murderous rampage. He
set homes on fire and shot and killed a woman out for her morning walk,
as well as drivers he pulled over. Police said some of the victims were
known to him, while others were targeted at random.
At some point, he removed the police uniform and drove to a gas station
in Enfield, where he was fatally shot by a police officer who was
refueling his vehicle.
The RCMP faced criticism this week for its response to the attack and
questions about how Wortman could have evaded officers for nearly 14 hours.
“I’ve been a police officer for almost 30 years now, and I can’t imagine
any more horrific set of circumstances [than] when you’re trying to
search for someone that looks like you,” Campbell said.
The police have also been condemned for tweeting information on the
attack as it was unfolding instead of sending it through an emergency
alert system that would have transmitted warnings to cellphones, radios
and televisions. Some of the families and friends of the victims said
the alert system might have saved lives.
Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil said officials asked the RCMP whether
it wanted to use the system. Police said they were preparing to use it
when the gunman was shot and killed.
As police searched for the suspect on the morning of April 19, they also
shot at a firehouse where people who left their homes because of the
rampage were being housed. The incident is now being investigated by a
provincial civilian police watchdog.
Several mass murders in Canada have been rooted in grievances against women.
The country’s previous deadliest mass shooting was in 1989, when a
gunman killed 14 women and himself at Montreal’s Ecole Polytechnique. In
a suicide note, he expressed his hatred for “feminists.”
In 2018, a man killed 10 people in a van attack on a busy Toronto
thoroughfare. He later told police he was “radicalized” online, where he
found a community of like-minded misogynistic men who refer to
themselves as incels, or involuntary celibate men, and denigrate women.