Beau Baker shooting death 'legally justified,' says SIU - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:32 AM | Calgary | -13.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Kitchener-Waterloo

Beau Baker shooting death 'legally justified,' says SIU

Ontario's police watchdog says "there are no reasonable" grounds to charge the Waterloo Regional Police officer who shot and killed 20-year-old Beau Baker outside his apartment in April of 2015.

Officer fatally shot Baker, then attempted to revive him

Photo of Beau Baker, copied from social media.
The Special Investigations Unit says that the officer who fatally shot Beau Baker was "legally justified" and it will not lay charges in connection with the April police shooting. (Facebook)

Ontario's police watchdog is calling the fatal police shooting of Beau Baker "legally justified," saying "there are no reasonable grounds" to charge the Waterloo Regional Police officer who fired seven shots at the 20-year-old Kitchener man the night he died.

"I am satisifed that the officer's apprehensions and his course of conduct were reasonable," Special Investigations Unit Director Tony Laparco wrote. "There are therefore no grounds to believe he committed a criminal offence."

The Tuesday announcementby the Special Investigations Unit is thefirst clear glimpse into what really happened more than six months ago, whenpolice arrivedoutside Baker's apartment building at 77 Brybeck Cresc.in Kitchener on the night of April 2nd, 2015.

Baker made a number of violent threats over the phone earlier that evening, according to the SIU, threateningto kill himself and hurt others with a knife, including police, paramedics and a passerby.

The SIU says Baker also gave the 911 operator an ominouswarning: that he wouldn't surrender his weapon to police without a fight.

Standoff with police

The first officer arrived on scene with that mind, according to investigators, who say it didn't take long for the policeman to find Bakerwaiting on the landing beside the front entrance of the apartment building.

When the officer asked what Baker was holding in his right hand, the SIU says, he lifted it, revealing the gleam of a knife with an eight centimetre blade.

Investigatorssaytheofficer drewhis gun, pointed itat Baker, promising that he intended to help the 20-year-old, not hurt him.

Baker was ordered to lie on the ground by the officer several times during the standoff, according to the SIU report, butBaker refused to follow the policeman's instructions.

Withdrawalwas not an option- SIU Director TonyLoparco

A crowd of about 20 people had gathered at that point and the witness closest to the confrontation told SIU investigators, "that Mr. Baker expressly told the subject officer that he was going to stab the constable in the face."

The standoff came to an abrupt end when Baker quickly lunged at the officer with a knife. The policeman stepped backwards before firing at Baker seven times.

The fatal bullet, according to the SIU, entered Baker's mid-abdomen and severed his aorta, the body's main artery.Baker thenslumpedto his knees and fell onto his back, following the gunfire.

The officer then rushed to Baker's side, applying pressure to his wounds and attempted to resuscitate Baker when it appeared he lost vital signs.

Once paramedics arrived, the SIU says Baker was rushed to hospital where he was declared dead at 10:10 p.m. on April 2nd.

The SIU says it reconstructed the chain of events leading up to the fatal shootingthrough the testimony of the officer who shot Baker as well as the nine police officers and 21 civilians who were there when the 20-year-old was killed.

The SIU recognizes that Baker was having a mental health crisis the night he died, but that the officers' actions were justified, given the threat made by Baker to hurt other people.

"Withdrawal was not an option," SIU Director Tony Loparco wrote of the police officer's actions that night. "Mr. Baker had also threatened to hurt others and the officer had to be concerned that he might make good on those threats if given an opportunity."