DOUBLE TREE MUSEUM
STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS SETS ANOTHER BOX OFFICE RECORD PAGE A11
PAGE A8
Red Deer Advocate MONDAY, DEC. 28, 2015
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REBELS TAKE DOWN OIL KINGS
POLICE SHOOTING
ASIRT seeking witnesses MORE DETAILS EMERGE FROM CHRISTMAS DAY RAMPAGE BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF More details of the Christmas day rampage and fatal police shooting have emerged, but Red Deer RCMP and the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team are looking for more witnesses. ASIRT took over carriage of part of the investigation after officers shot and killed a 37-year-old man wreaking havoc in a front-end loader. The 37-year-old was fatally shot by police attempting to make an arrest just after 1 p.m. on Dec. 25. Red Deer RCMP had followed the vehicle from the industrial area into a field north of Red Deer. ASIRT said during the pursuit, the front-end loader collided with a police vehicle. The officer exited their vehicle and fired several shots at the suspect. A second officer also fired several shots. The front-end loader proceeded into a field and began to move in circles. Other officers who had followed the front-end loader were able to get close enough to see the man slumped over in the seat, no longer in control of the front-end loader. The front-end loader continued into a wooded area and traveled for another 800 metres where it became stuck against a tree. Officers climbed into the loader and turned it off. The man was bleeding and unresponsive. Emergency Medical Services were called in, but the man had died at the scene. An autopsy will be performed in the coming days. The man left a wake of destruction in his rampage through north Red Deer. After stealing the front-end loader, he damaged and flipped over vehicles in both the Edgar and Burnt Lake industrial parks. Though mostly causing damage to unoccupied vehicles, a truck with people in it was damaged by the man, but no one was seriously hurt. Police said the man was sought in relation to a violent incident earlier that morning at a Red Deer home. According to a release from the RCMP, a 47-yearold woman was sexually assaulted and an attempted murder was committed on a 20-year-old man. ASIRT referred to the early morning incident as “intimate partner violence.” The victims’ injuries are not life-threatening and they did receive medical treatment. Police had a run-in with the man earlier that day at about 11:30 a.m. in Sylvan Lake. He was found in a stolen vehicle and when police tried to stop it, he reversed into a marked police car and disabled it. He then fled the scene in the stolen vehicle. The identity of the deceased was not released by police, to protect the identity of the victims. ASIRT has taken over as investigating agency for the fatal shooting of the suspect. Red Deer RCMP and the RCMP Serious Crimes Branch continue their investigation into the attempted murder, sexual assault and theft that precipitated the shooting.
Please see Shooting on Page A2
WEATHER Snow. High -11. Low -15
75% SOLD FORECAST ON A2
INDEX Four sections Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . A3 Business . . . . . . . . . B6-7 Canada . . . . . . . . . . A6-7 Classified . . . . . . . . B8-9 Comics . . . . . . . . . . .B10 Entertainment . A11-12 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . B1-5
Photo by ASHLI BARRETT/Advocate staff
Brandon Hagel of the Red Deer Rebels attempts to slips a puck past Edmonton Oil Kings goaltender Patrick Dea during Sunday WHL action at the Enmax Centrium. The Rebels won 5-4. See related story on page B1.
Local teen enjoying time as parliamentary page BY MURRAY CRAWFORD ADVOCATE STAFF
HOUSE OF COMMONS
There was a moment a local teen shared with the Governor General that will stick with the first year university student. Alexander Wozny, a University of Ottawa student and Page at the House of Commons, was chatting with Governor General David Johnston while taking a group photo with the pages. “We were seated next to each other and he asks me where I’m from,” said Wozny. “I told him Red Deer. And he responded ‘oh Red Deer, that’s that big metropolis between Calgary Alexander Wozny and Edmonton right.’ “It was this really special moment for me. I’ve had so many people ask me where’s Red Deer, but here’s our Governor General who knows all about it. Asking about how much snow we had and whether we had Chinooks like Calgary.” Since the start of the school year, Wozny has been pulling double duty as a student and working at Parliament as a page. Pages serve the Speaker, Members of Parliament and other officials and assist them in their duties. Wozny applied the day before the deadline, after a lot of encouragement from his mom and knowing another local person who had also applied. “My mom brought it up in Grade 11,” said Wozny, who attended high school at Lindsay Thurber. “We had a former page come back and talk to us sometimes.” When Grade 12 started, Wozny’s mother became a little more forceful with her encouragement.
After a little research, Wzony questioned what the program was all about. “You go to Ottawa and help Members of Parliament?” Wozny said with a perplexed inflection. “Then I watched CPAC and you could see all the pages running around delivering documents.” Then it dawned on him what the job would really be. Starting his time at the University of Ottawa working with federal politicians who are having an impact on the country, as his first university job and his time in a new city. But the program isn’t the only venture keeping Wozny busy. He is majoring in political science and communications. Among his page colleagues, Wozny said there is a broad range of interests ranging from music, health science and law to politics. An interest in politics is a common thread among to 40 pages. “It’s been really interesting, and enjoyable,” said Wozny, who was stuck doing office work until Parliament reconvened after the fall election. “The pages are excited to get started, but that’s also true of the new MPs. It was so special to see them enter and it was like the first day of school.” Wozny is also using this time to look closely at how or what is covered by media outlets during Parliament sittings. He reads news stories and compares them with what he saw or thought would be notable. To prepare for their role, pages are required to try and memorize names and faces based off of pictures. Early on they rely on seating charts, but Wozny is trying to memorize the seating arrangement so he doesn’t have to rely on the chart. “We’re the furniture of the house,” said Wozny. “It’s our job to make sure everything is running smoothly and we’re supposed to blend into the background.” mcrawford@reddeeradvocate.com
Plow on demand New business in the maritimes described as “uber for plows.” Allows consumers to find contractor nearby to plow.
PLEASE RECYCLE
Story on PAGE B7
ONLY 4 DAYS LEFT!
Kin Canada Red Deer Kinsmen Club
Call for tickets at 1-866-559-6759
on site 1-5pm every weekend @ 77 Lalor Drive, Red Deer, AB Final Draw Date December 31st, 2015 Home built by Larkaun Homes license # 411839 Online ticket purchase: www.reddeerkinsmen.com