Tumbler Ridge school shooting
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The Canadian prime minister attended a vigil with federal leaders and paid tribute to the eight victims.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney laid a bouquet of flowers at a makeshift memorial yesterday as he visited the grief-stricken town of Tumbler
The families of the victims of the mass shooting in a remote Canadian town are grappling with unrelenting grief as details emerge about those killed in the country’s deadliest mass shooting in years.
Northern Health says Tumbler Ridge Health Centre hours are being temporarily extended starting Friday until March 6 to help the community that's still grappling with the aftermath of a deadly shooting.
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Tumbler Ridge Shooter Van Rootselaar Created Disturbing ‘Mall Shooting Simulator’ Before Attack
CHILLING details have emerged about Jesse Van Rootselaar, 18, the suspected shooter who killed eight and injured 25 at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in Canada, one of the nation’s deadliest school massacres.
An avid hockey player, she played defence for the U-13 Tumbler Ridge Raptors. In 2024, her team went to Calgary for WickFest, an all-female hockey festival founded by four-time Olympic gold medallist Hayley Wickenheiser.
Nothing I can say will bring your children home,” the prime minister told hundreds gathered at Friday night’s vigil in tribute to the victims of Tuesday’s mass shooting.
Eight people are dead and 27 injured after the mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge in northeastern B.C. on Tuesday, Feb. 10. The shooting unfolded at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School, where six people were later found dead. Two others were flown to hospital, while 25 were assessed for minor injuries.