Friend identifies police-involved shooting victim as Sixties Scoop survivor
A friend of 57-year-old Jason West told CTV News it was he who died after a police-involved shooting in Windsor on Friday.
Steven Mull, a local Indigenous shaman, was at the scene near Goyeau and Elliott Street East in the aftermath of the incident.
It was there that he told CTV News he knew the man killed—and knew he had been struggling with his mental health.
“He was just a really good guy,” said Mull. “I’ve never heard anything bad about him. It’s just, lately, anger.”
Ontario’s police watchdog, the Special Investigations Unit (SIU), has taken over the investigation and has not officially released the identity of the man killed, only his age.
Mull said West was a survivor of the Sixties Scoop, a period during which Indigenous children were forcibly removed from their families.
He said that trauma stayed with him all his life—and followed him to that downtown intersection on Friday morning.
“I believe today we all suffer from intergenerational trauma,” said Mull.
“I think, as people, you don’t see what we’ve gone through. So you wouldn’t know.”
NEW DETAILS
Staff at the Downtown Mission revealed that the incident began before a 911 call reported a man at the Food Basics grocery store armed with a knife.
Executive Director Rukshini Ponniah-Goulin said in a statement that a stabbing had occurred behind the former Windsor Library building on Ouellette Avenue.
“Mission staff went across the street, I believe, to assist police with the stabbing incident,” she wrote.
The scene of the shooting, as seen on September 9, 2024 (Travis Fortnum/CTV News Windsor)
She said staff heard gunshots not long after.
New information from the SIU indicates two knives were involved, and two officers fired their guns.
SIU spokesperson Kristy Denette said the post-mortem was conducted on Sunday, though those details will not be made public.
Six individuals have been invited for interviews as part of the SIU’s investigation, including four witnesses and two “subject officials.”
The SIU defines subject officials as “an official whose conduct, in the Director’s opinion, may have caused the death, serious injury, firearm discharge, or alleged sexual assault under investigation.”
The two subject officials are both Windsor police officers.
OFFICERS ON THE MEND
At least one officer sustained what a Windsor Police Service (WPS) spokesperson described as a “minor cut.”
Sergeant Kent Rice, president of the Windsor Police Association, said he had spoken to both involved.
“I’ve been in contact with all the officers affected, and, as of now, I can say that they appear to be handling themselves well,” he said.
Rice said WPS offers counselling and other services to officers involved in potentially traumatic incidents but noted that trauma may not manifest until much later.
“This is a tragedy,” he said.
The scene of the shooting, as seen on September 9, 2024 (Travis Fortnum/CTV News Windsor)
“I don’t have an officer at Windsor Police Service who comes to work and wants to be in this situation.”
It was trauma, Mull theorized, that led his friend to the dark place he found himself in on Friday morning.
He said West was a good man who liked cats and loved his pet fish.
Mull said West had wanted desperately to reconnect with his son, but he doesn’t believe he was able to.
“He was in a bad place,” said Mull, “but he was a good man.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING India withdraws Canada envoy named in probe, expels diplomats
India ordered the expulsion of six Canadian diplomats on Monday and withdrew its own envoy from Canada, in response to what it said was Ottawa's decision to name him and others as 'persons of interest' in an investigation.
Ontario police say 'escalating incidents' between high schools connected to deadly crash
'Escalating incidents' between two Hamilton high schools are believed to be connected to a car crash last week that left a 15-year-old boy dead, police say.
Undercooked bear meat linked to outbreak of rare parasitic disease in U.S.
An outbreak of a rare parasitic disease has been linked to undercooked bear meat eaten by dozens of people at a gathering in North Carolina, a new U.S. CDC report has revealed.
Canadian drink company tastes controversy after Simu Liu raises cultural appropriation questions
Controversy bubbled for a Canadian drink company after its founders drew the ire of a Marvel superhero on an episode of a 'Shark Tank'-style reality series.
'We apologize to anyone we've offended': Bath and Body Works pulls candles over backlash
A major American retailer has stopped selling its new winter-themed candle over backlash from shoppers who said its design resembled Ku Klux Klan hoods.
Striking images show rare floods in the largest hot desert on Earth
Striking images from the Sahara Desert show large lakes etched into rolling sand dunes after one of the most arid, barren places in the world was hit with its first floods in decades.
Father of 10-year-old girl found dead in the U.K. called police from Pakistan to say he killed her
The father of a 10-year-old girl found dead in her home in England fled to Pakistan and called U.K. police from there to say he had killed her, a jury heard Monday.
NASA spacecraft rockets toward Jupiter's moon Europa in search of the right conditions for life
A NASA spacecraft rocketed away Monday on a quest to explore Jupiter’s tantalizing moon Europa and reveal whether its vast hidden ocean might hold the keys to life.
British content creator dies trying to climb Spain’s highest bridge
A 26-year-old British man has died after falling from Spain’s tallest bridge during an attempt to climb one of its pylons.