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Man shot by police at ferry terminal shot himself at same time

Police shooting windshiel00.jpg Eight bullet holes are visible in the windshield of the car the man who was shot was driving.

 Police shooting windshiel00.jpgPolice shooting windshiel00.jpg Eight bullet holes are visible in the windshield of the car the man who was shot was driving. Photograph By IIO

The man killed in a police-involved shooting at a Nanaimo ferry terminal shot himself in the head at the same time as officers shot him several times in the chest, B.C.’s police watchdog has found.

In a report released Monday, the Independent Investigations Office, which investigates police-involved deaths or serious injuries, cleared the officers of wrongdoing in connection with the May 8 shooting at the Departure Bay ferry terminal.

The man, whose identity has never been released, was wanted in connection with a violent car-jacking in Penticton and a shooting that wounded a man in Summerland.

Police had positioned themselves to intercept the car as it disembarked from the ferry about 10:15 a.m. The car was separated from the driving public and boxed in by unmarked police vehicles.

The man reached into the passenger seat of the car, raised a long-barrelled handgun and fatally shot himself in the head, the IIO found. At the same time the man raised the pistol, two officers fired their 9 mm firearms, delivering what would have been fatal gunshot injuries to the man’s chest, according to the IIO report, which was based on interviews with 31 civilian witnesses, statements from 11 police officers, B.C. Emergency Health Services records, police transmission recordings, B.C. Ferries surveillance footage, firearms analysis reports, the toxicology report, cellphone video, photographs and medical records.

The man was seated in the driver’s seat and photos released by the IIO show eight bullet holes in the windshield of the car. One officer fired three rounds, while the other officer fired five shots, according to ballistics testing.

“Once stopped, the evidence is clear that [the man], while surrounded by police, raised his gun and shot himself in the head,” wrote Ron MacDonald, the IIO’s chief civilian director. “That was his only intention. However, as he did this, the gun would have been pointed at several police officers.”

Six of the civilian witnesses, including two B.C. Ferries employees, one paramedic and three bystanders, were either close to the incident or directly involved. Police also interviewed three people who knew the man personally but were not involved in the incident.

According to their accounts, the ship’s captain was contacted and told police that the car was in the first 20 vehicles on the upper deck. B.C. Ferries crew arranged for all traffic behind the man’s car to be held back.

 Police shooting aerial00443.jpgPolice shooting aerial00443.jpg An aerial view of the final positions of the car and four police vehicles in the Departure Bay ferry terminal shooting. Photograph By IIO

Seven officers arrived in four unmarked police vehicles: a black SUV, a white van and two pickup trucks.

As the car drove off the ship, the police vehicles surrounded the vehicle, with the white van pulling in front. The man tried to pass the van on the right, which caused the van’s front bumper to hit the car’s rear driver side, spinning it in a counter-clockwise direction.

The other police vehicles blocked in the car to prevent escape. The SUV was nose-to-nose with the car.

Witnesses reported seeing officers get out of their vehicles and draw their firearms. They reported hearing a number of shots, but did not know who fired.

After the shots, paramedics staged in the area travelled to the scene with lights and sirens on. One paramedic saw the man lying on his back in a pool of blood with his hands cuffed behind his back. Officers were applying pressure to his injuries.

The man had a very serious head injury, three gunshot wounds to his abdomen, a gunshot wound to his collarbone and one to the left bicep.

The paramedic was told by an officer that the head wound was self-inflicted while the other wounds were inflicted by police.

The paramedic reported that the man had a pulse and he was put on ventilation. Paramedics continued CPR as the man was transferred to Nanaimo Regional Hospital, where he was pronounced dead 20 to 30 minutes later.

Three civilian witnesses who were not involved with the incident at the ferry told the IIO that the man previously stated on the phone that he had “wasted somebody” and had stolen a car. He also said more than once: “I’m not going to jail. The police are going to have to shoot me.”

Another witness said the man showed them a firearm about a month before the incident and the description matched the one found at the scene.

Witnesses who knew the man said he had serious life challenges, including an injury that prevented him from working and serious substance addiction.

The two officers who fired the shots declined to provide a statement, notes or data, which is their right under section 17.4 of the memorandum of understanding between the IIO and B.C. police agencies and consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

One of the officers who led the police operation told the IIO that the arrest was deemed high or very high risk because the man was thought to be armed. The officer said the RCMP had an obligation to stop the man to prevent further violent incidents.

At least three officers said that when the man raised his gun to shoot himself, it was pointed toward the windshield, putting officers in the line of fire.

“If I’d had my gun out, I would have shot him,” one officer said. “Until he put it to the side of his head, I didn’t know he was going to [shoot] himself.”

An autopsy report found an entrance wound at the right temple of the man’s head and an exit wound at the left side of his head.

The pathologist confirmed that the gunshot wound to the upper left chest would have been fatal and it’s not possible to determine which shot occurred first.

A toxicology report found that the man had high levels of fentanyl in his body.

kderosa@timescolonist.com