12/19/2022
Originally Published: 18 DEC 22 22:40 ET
Updated: 19 DEC 22 11:33 ET
By Elizabeth Wolfe, Tavleen Tarrant and Jay Croft, CNN
(CNN) -- Five people were killed in a shooting at a condominium in a Toronto suburb Sunday night, police said, a "terrible" crime that came amid Canada's efforts to tighten its gun control laws.
After responding to an active shooting call about 7:20 p.m. at the residential building in Vaughan, just north of Toronto, police found a "horrendous scene where numerous victims were deceased," York Regional Police Chief Jim MacSween said during a news conference. A male gunman, 73, was shot by an officer during a confrontation and died, the chief said.
Constable Laura Nicolle told CNN the incident was the "most terrible call I've seen in my entire career."
Police have not released the shooter's name and will not publicly name the victims until their families have been notified, the authorities said. Nicolle said the victims appeared to have been from more than one condominium unit.
Residents were evacuated while emergency response personnel worked to clear the building and ensure there were no more victims. The residents waited as police cleared the building floor-by-floor, eventually returning to their homes after midnight.
A motive in the shooting rampage has not been released and police did not share what led up to the killings. Authorities believe there is no longer any threat to the community.
"We offer our sincere condolences to the victims and their families," MacSween said.
The York Regional Police's homicide unit will continue investigating the shooting, MacSween said.
Ontario's Special Investigations Unit, which is called in when officers discharge their firearm at a person, said in a release it is investigating.
Canada: More gun restrictions than US
Sunday's killings come in the wake of fresh moves by Canada's government to tighten gun control laws in the country, which has more gun regulation and far less gun violence than the US. Citizens may own firearms with a license; some must be registered.
This year, the government tightened restrictions further.
In October, regulations went into effect banning the sale, purchase, or transfer of handguns within Canada. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had announced the changes in May. "We have frozen the market for handguns in this country," Trudeau said at a news conference in Surrey, British Columbia, attended by family members of gun violence victims and other advocates, Reuters reported.
"As we see gun violence continue to rise ... we have an obligation to take action," Trudeau added. "Today our national handgun freeze is coming into force."
Canada's gun homicide rate per 100,000 residents in 2019 was one-eighth of the US rate, according to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. The country's population is about 38 million, compared to the US population of about 332 million.
Canada's homicide rate rose for three years in a row starting in 2019, according to Statistics Canada, with 297 gun-related killings in 2021, the group said.
The US had more than 20,000 gun-related killings in 2021, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said.
Canada's deadliest mass killing was in May 2020, when 22 people were fatally shot or died in house fires set by a gunman in Nova Scotia. Less than two weeks later, Trudeau's government banned more than 1,500 models and variants of assault-style weapons, making their use, sale or importation illegal.
In June 2022, a shootout outside a bank in British Columbia left six officers injured and two suspects dead, authorities said.
Then in July, two people were killed and two injured in a series of shootings in Langley, near Vancouver in British Columbia, police said.
Eleven people died in a mass stabbing attack in September 2022 in Canada's Saskatchewan province.