Advertisement

Two charged in plot to commit mass murder in Canadian mall

 
Canadian police search on Friday in Cole Harbour, a suburb of Halifax, Nova Scotia, for a suspect in the mass murder plot.
Canadian police search on Friday in Cole Harbour, a suburb of Halifax, Nova Scotia, for a suspect in the mass murder plot.
Published Feb. 15, 2015

TORONTO — Canadian police have foiled a plot by three suspects who were planning to go to a mall in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and kill as many people as they could before killing themselves on Valentine's Day, police said Saturday.

One suspect fatally shot himself as police moved in to arrest him, and an American suspect confessed to the plot when she was arrested at the Halifax airport, a senior police official told the Associated Press.

Police and Canadian Justice Minister Peter MacKay said the plot was not related to terrorism.

"This appeared to be a group of murderous misfits that were … prepared to wreak havoc and mayhem on our community," MacKay said Saturday. "The attack does not appear to have been culturally motivated, therefore not linked to terrorism."

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said friends Lindsay Kantha Souvannarath, 23, of Geneva, Ill., and Randall Steven Shepherd, 20, of Nova Scotia, have been charged with conspiracy to commit murder.

Nova Scotia RCMP Commanding Officer Brian Brennan said the suspects planned to go to the Halifax Shopping Center and kill as many people as they could on Saturday, Valentine's Day, before taking their own lives.

He told a news conference that police found three long-barreled rifles in the home of a third suspect, a 19-year-old who died before he could be arrested. He did not say how the suspect died.

But a senior police official told the AP that the 19-year-old male fatally shot himself early Friday after police surrounded his home in the Halifax suburb of Timberlea. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

The official said the American woman had prepared a number of pronouncements to be tweeted after her death. Shepherd was also arrested early Friday at the airport where he went to meet his friend, police said.

The suspects used a chat stream and were apparently obsessed with death and had many photos of mass killings, said the official.

Police said they acted quickly after receiving information from the public on the Crime Stoppers tip line. The two suspects are due in court on Tuesday.

The official said police worked with Canadian border officials to find the female suspect on her flight as she was making her way from Chicago.

Police in Geneva, about 35 miles west of Chicago, searched Souvannarath's home on Friday night and seized several items. Geneva police Cmdr. Julie Nash declined to describe the items or their potential value as evidence.

Tensions remained high in normally calm Halifax. Police responded to reports of shots fired at the Halifax Shopping Center on Saturday night, but backed off when it was determined that it was seven youths playing with slingshots.