'A waste of good life': Mother of man gunned down in Hamilton calls for killings to stop - Action News
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Hamilton

'A waste of good life': Mother of man gunned down in Hamilton calls for killings to stop

Michael Campbell was shot and killed Wednesday. His mother says he was a loving father and loyal friend who didn't deserve to die.

Cheryl Campbell says her son Michael was a loving father and loyal friend

Michael Campbell, 34, was shot and killed on a central Hamilton sidewalk on August 8, 2018. His mother says she still can't believe her son is gone. (Cheryl Campbell)

When Cheryl Campbell heard someone had been shot and killed in Hamilton Wednesday,her heart suddenly sank.

She knew her son Michael had plans to drive down from Brampton to visit a bar hereand for some reason she had a bad feeling.

Campbell started frantically calling hospitals and emergency officials trying to find out what happened. Eventually she reached police. They told her Michael was dead.

"It's hard to think that my son is gone," she said, through tears."You're in denial."

As she spoke abouther son,Campbell constantly slipped between the present and past tense, struggling to come to grips with the fact he's dead.

"Michael has children. Michael had a future and when you're looking at this you have a lot of questions about what happened and why?"

He didn't deserve to die in the street like a dog.- Cheryl Campbell, Michael's mother

Hamilton police are working to answer those questions.

Staff Sgt. DaveOleniuksaid it seems as thougha group of about half dozen people were just "shooting the breeze" on the sidewalk across from Sheila's Place, a bar onKing Street East,around 1:30 a.m. when the shooting started.

Michael Campbell, 34, was killed.

Two men and a woman, all of whom are in their 20s or 30s also suffered gunshot wounds, but are expected to survive.

Investigators search the scene of the early morning shooting on Hamilton's East Avenue where Michael Campbell was killed. (Tony Smyth/CBC)

No weapon has been recovered and police haven't released a description of any suspects.

But Oleniuk said police believe the shooting wasn't random. They just don't know if Michael was the intended target or a tragic casualty. His past, however, does includeseveral criminal charges, court records show.

Despite that history, Michael'smother says she can't understand why someone would want to kill her son.

"Michael is not the kind of person who would be targeted by anybody," she explained."He loved restaurants, he loved food, so I can understand him being out there at a bar or outside a restaurant I could understand all that."

"What I can't understand is why he was shot."

Past contact with police

A Toronto police media release from 2014 reveals he was arrested as part of ahuman trafficking and juvenile prostitution investigation.

Toronto police tweeted this photo of Michael Campbell when he was wanted by police in 2015. (Toronto Police Service)

Two years later he pleaded guilty in Superior Court to exercising control over a teenaged prostituteand possessing an unloaded, prohibited firearm, along with ammunition, according to a 2016 court file.

A 'huge tragedy'

Campbell saysher son's past doesn't providea complete picture of who hewas. She claims Michaelwas the type of person who ran away from fights and wasn't one cause trouble.

"His love of his friends led him to die," she added."He didn't deserve to die in the street like a dog."

More than a dozen bright green evidence markers littered East Avenue Wednesday as forensic officers worked at the scene of the fatal shooting. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

Michael's death marks the latestkillingin what has been a violent summer with shootings across the Greater Toronto Area.

Campbell said the region hasseen enough bloodshed. Now something needs to change.

"The killing that's happening around the greater GTA needs to stop. It's a waste of good life. It's a huge tragedy."