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Post by Sher on May 9, 2005 8:04:30 GMT -5
Monday, May 09, 2005
EDMONTON -- A man was shot in both ankles and dragged by a car during a wild ride Sunday afternoon in a northwest neighbourhood.
Members of the Edmonton police department's gang unit later interviewed the victim at the Royal Alexandra Hospital.
The man, in his late 20s or early 30s, told witnesses and police he didn't know the men he had shared a car with, or the front-seat passenger who shot him shortly after 3 p.m.
A young couple who live on Dunvegan Drive near 127th Street were the first to talk to the victim. Fearing retribution, they asked not to be named.
"We heard a pop-pop, then a scream," said the man. "A few seconds later we heard pop-pop-pop, pop, pop, pop, real quick."
Thinking it was children playing with firecrackers, the man and his girlfriend went outside and saw the victim staggering up the sidewalk, obviously in pain.
"I said 'Are you all right,' and he said 'No, I got shot,' " the man said. "Can you call an ambulance?"
The man told the victim to sit down on the sidewalk before he fell down, and told his girlfriend to call an ambulance.
The victim said he had been waiting for a bus up the street when a car pulled up with three men in it.
He said he initially thought he knew the man in the back seat and when the driver asked if he wanted a ride, he got in. When he realized he'd made a mistake he asked to get out but they wouldn't let him.
"He said the guy in the front seat flashed a gun, then put it away and pulled out a pair of scissors."
As the car sped down Dunvegan Road, swerving from side to side, the victim attempted to get out but he was restrained by the man in the back seat.
That's when the first two shots were fired, he told the witness who helped him.
He said he got partway out the door when the rear tire of the car ran over his foot, tearing off his shoe.
That's when he yelled, he said. As the car sped around a corner he was dragged, then finally broke free. More gunfire sounded. Five empty shell casings were found on the pavement where that happened.
The man then began walking back up Dunvegan Road to where his shoe was. That's when the man and the woman came out of their house and offered to help him.
The witness said he could see at least one bullet hole in the man's right ankle. He also had road rash on his chest and back from being dragged as well as a bloody mouth.
"As he was talking to me he pulled up his shirt and felt around to see if he had been shot in the chest," the witness said.
"I just scratched my head when he said he'd never seen the guys in the car before. I've lived in this neighbourhood for 27 years and now this."
Another resident of the neighbourhood said he saw the car speed by before shots rang out.
"I said, 'What are they doing,' " said John Pham, who saw the small black car swerving along Dunvegan Rd.
He later heard shouting from inside tinted windows.
"About one minute later I heard about six shots," he said.
By that time, the car had sped out of view.
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Post by Sher on May 9, 2005 8:11:56 GMT -5
EDMONTON -- There's a serial killer on the loose in Edmonton, and soon he may turn to more "respectable" victims, says a renowned U.S. expert.
"It would not be a surprise that the killer branched out ... targeting more respectable types, more middle-class types," said Prof. Jack Levin, author of numerous books on serial killers and director of Boston's Brudnick Centre on Violence at Northeastern University.
"It's a jump ... in risk taking. The killer will begin with the most vulnerable victims and then, as he understands he's getting away with murder, he cuts corners."
A female corpse found Friday by a farmer tilling his field has rekindled speculation a serial killer is on the loose. The latest corpse was just a few kilometres from where three Edmonton prostitutes have been found slain and dumped in Strathcona County since 2003.
An autopsy scheduled for this morning is expected to determine the cause of death of the latest victim and maybe an identity.
The RCMP-led Project KARE team is providing assistance with this latest investigation and was on scene Saturday.
KARE is probing the unsolved deaths of at least 18 prostitutes across the province, some dating back 20 years. The case load now stands at 41 homicides and 31 missing people.
RCMP believe one person may be responsible for more than one of the deaths.
But stating outright there's a serial killer hunting city hookers is "making a pretty strong statement, will that statement stand up in a court of law?" RCMP spokesman Cpl. Wayne Oakes said yesterday.
Twelve prostitutes have been found slain in the Edmonton area in the last 16 years. They've been found in bushes, fields, or otherwise remote areas.
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Post by Sher on May 10, 2005 10:36:47 GMT -5
Habitat for Humanity is resigned to losing thousands of dollars worth of building materials to thieves - but the charity hopes the public will help recover two stolen trucks.
Sometime Sunday evening, a cube van and a pickup truck loaded with building materials, such as doors and windows, were stolen from the Habitat for Humanity yard at 8210 Yellowhead Tr., said president Alfred Nikolai.
LIKE A LIFELINE
"They're like our lifeline - we use them extensively to build our homes," Nikolai said.
Volunteers donate time and materials through Habitat for Humanity to build homes for needy people. After they volunteer to help build a few homes, they're rewarded with their own residence.
Nikolai said the gate to their facility was locked, but the thieves smashed the gate to gain access. He and other shocked volunteers discovered the theft yesterday morning.
"We probably won't see the (building materials) again, but we hope to get the trucks back," Nikolai said.
"We'll never get the materials back, and doors and windows are extremely expensive."
He said volunteers are still working to put a price tag on the theft, and will have a better idea of what's missing today.
Still, he said, it's easily in the thousands of dollars.
CLEARLY LABELLED WITH LOGO
Police said the trucks - which are clearly labelled with the Habitat for Humanity logo - probably weren't the targets of the theft. They were just used to haul away the materials.
In fact, a trailer was loaded up with some of the goods, but after the crooks discovered they couldn't smash the lock chaining it in place it was left behind.
"Stealing from a charity, you gotta be pretty low," Nikolai said. "It's just a shame, you know. It's a real bloody shame."
Anyone who may have seen the two white vans is asked to call police.
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Post by Sher on May 11, 2005 9:48:11 GMT -5
Homicide detectives have been alerted after a man believed to be in his 50s was found with critical injuries in a city alley, say authorities.
"Investigators are still trying to determine if he was attacked or if it was a medical condition," city police spokesman Dean Parthenis said yesterday, adding homicide detectives were alerted as a matter of protocol.
Emergency medical services (EMS) were called around 11:50 a.m. yesterday to an alley near 103 Avenue and 114 Street after a report of a man in cardiac arrest. Paramedics found signs of obvious facial, head and body trauma that could have been the result of an assault. The man was rushed to the Royal Alexandra Hospital He was listed in critical condition, said EMS.
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Post by Sher on May 11, 2005 9:48:38 GMT -5
Rocky Mountain House RCMP have recovered a truck they believe was involved in a fatal accident last Thursday morning.
The body of 26-year-old Dennis Garren Hunter, from the O'Chiese Reserve, was discovered in a ditch by Mounties responding to a report of a twisted bicycle and a shoe on Highway 11 near the Highway 22 junction.
A Rocky Mountain House resident noticed a black 2001 Dodge pickup with front-end damage parked outside a home in the community 219 km southwest of Edmonton. A man had been arrested and questioned before being released pending further investigation.
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Post by Sher on May 11, 2005 9:51:31 GMT -5
The city police gang unit was called in after two men believed to be in their 20s were shot last night after an apparent road rage incident downtown, say authorities.
"Gang unit has been notified, but again at this point it appears to be a road rage incident versus anything else that's motivating it," said cop spokesman Chris McLeod.
Just before 7 p.m., a maroon Corolla was travelling near 115 Avenue and 93 Street when at least one other car, a red Chevy, pulled up beside it, said police.
"The drivers were yelling back and forth at each other about each other's driving," said McLeod. "The men then exited the vehicles, got into a bit of an altercation."
Police added they are also getting conflicting reports about whether or not a third vehicle was involved.
At some point the two men, a passenger and driver from the Corolla, were shot.
The passenger was shot in the shoulder. Emergency medical services (EMS) said they found a man in his 20s shot in the shoulder on the grass in that area when they arrived.
"The bystanders had a towel to stop the bleeding," said EMS paramedic Ryan Velthuizen.
EMS said the man shot in the shoulder was taken to University hospital with non- life-threatening injuries.
Police said the Corolla's driver later ditched the car in the area.
"That second man ran from the vehicle and into a nearby home where the homeowners called police," said McLeod.
"It appears the man was taking refuge in the home."
A police tactical unit was called and the man was later transported by EMS to the Royal Alexandra Hospital. EMS said he had been shot in the elbow and suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
McLeod said at least two shots were fired and a couple of casings were recovered by police last night.
"We're not entirely sure what weapon was used at this point, but it may have been a shotgun," said McLeod.
Police recovered the maroon Corolla close to where the shooting took place.
Cops were still looking for a Chevy vehicle late last night. Officers had sealed off an area near 158A Avenue and 88 Street.
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Post by Sher on May 13, 2005 12:47:40 GMT -5
A police officer opened fire on two people in a stolen car yesterday after the driver tried to run him down near a busy west Edmonton strip mall, say cops.
The driver of the stolen vehicle - later treated for a gunshot wound to his right shoulder and another to his stomach - moments later slammed head-on into a Mercedes SL 500.
The drama started when the 30-year-old driver of the stolen blue Sunfire ran a red light near 142 Street and 105 Avenue around 1 p.m. A four-minute ground pursuit followed but was called off due to public safety concerns, police said.
About 20 minutes later, with the help of the Air-1 cop chopper, the stolen car was boxed in by police at a dead-end apartment block entry at West Edmonton Village, near 177 Street and 64 Avenue.
"The suspect basically floored it, pushing his way through the two police vehicles," said cop spokesman Dean Parthenis. "As the vehicle was moving towards the officer, shots were fired into the stolen car which then continued to travel north along 177 Street and 69 Avenue, where it collided with up to three vehicles before coming to a stop."
Police yesterday couldn't say how many shots had been fired, but three bullet holes could be seen in the Sunfire.
Jackie Brown, who works across the street at a bakery in the MarketPlace at the Callingwood strip mall, was taking garbage out when she heard the action.
"I seen him (a police officer) pull the gun, and then I heard the shots," said Brown, who thought she heard three or four rounds fired. Because her view was blocked by a tree, she couldn't see what the officer was shooting at.
"And then I seen someone come over and hug the police officer," Brown added, saying he looked shaken.
After the officer opened fire, the car rocketed north on 177 Street near an entrance to Callingwood Square, about two blocks away.
Dedric Robinson had just parked his SUV across the street and turned around to see about six officers - some with guns drawn - surround the Sunfire, still in the street.
Police hammered on the car's windows with batons, yelling for the man and his female passenger to get out, witnesses said. One officer was later treated in hospital for lacerations.
"He wouldn't get out," Robinson said. "Somehow, the girl was dragged out, but the guy wasn't ... he stepped on the gas."
The woman, 23, was handcuffed on the ground and was later treated in hospital for a gunshot to the right leg, said emergency medical services.
The suspect then sped off again, turning hard into Callingwood Square, jumping a curb and clipping a white pick-up truck before slamming into the Mercedes - worth well over $100,000 brand new - and stopping, airbag deployed, near the pumps of a Shell gas station.
"He was just going so fast ... and I saw him smash into the black Mercedes," Robinson said.
Police were on the scene quickly, guns drawn, again ordering the suspect out of the car.
Some witnesses reported hearing more gunfire after the car was again surrounded. Parthenis last night said no shots were fired in the Shell lot.
"We seen them wrestling him (the suspect) to the ground," said Kyle Patriquin, adding the suspect moaned in pain during the takedown.
Both suspects remained in hospital last night with non-life-threatening injuries. There was no word on charges. Cops say the driver is known to police.
The driver of the Mercedes walked away unscathed.
Homicide detectives are assisting with the investigation, standard practice when an officer discharges his weapon.
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Post by Sher on May 13, 2005 13:02:37 GMT -5
Homicide detectives have been alerted after a man believed to be in his 50s was found with critical injuries in a city alley, say authorities.
"Investigators are still trying to determine if he was attacked or if it was a medical condition," city police spokesman Dean Parthenis said yesterday, adding homicide detectives were alerted as a matter of protocol.
Emergency medical services (EMS) were called around 11:50 a.m. yesterday to an alley near 103 Avenue and 114 Street after a report of a man in cardiac arrest. Paramedics found signs of obvious facial, head and body trauma that could have been the result of an assault. The man was rushed to the Royal Alexandra Hospital He was listed in critical condition, said EMS.
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Post by Sher on May 13, 2005 13:02:56 GMT -5
Rocky Mountain House RCMP have recovered a truck they believe was involved in a fatal accident last Thursday morning.
The body of 26-year-old Dennis Garren Hunter, from the O'Chiese Reserve, was discovered in a ditch by Mounties responding to a report of a twisted bicycle and a shoe on Highway 11 near the Highway 22 junction.
A Rocky Mountain House resident noticed a black 2001 Dodge pickup with front-end damage parked outside a home in the community 219 km southwest of Edmonton. A man had been arrested and questioned before being released pending further investigation.
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Post by Sher on May 13, 2005 13:04:59 GMT -5
The city police gang unit was called in after two men believed to be in their 20s were shot last night after an apparent road rage incident downtown, say authorities.
"Gang unit has been notified, but again at this point it appears to be a road rage incident versus anything else that's motivating it," said cop spokesman Chris McLeod.
Just before 7 p.m., a maroon Corolla was travelling near 115 Avenue and 93 Street when at least one other car, a red Chevy, pulled up beside it, said police.
"The drivers were yelling back and forth at each other about each other's driving," said McLeod. "The men then exited the vehicles, got into a bit of an altercation."
Police added they are also getting conflicting reports about whether or not a third vehicle was involved.
At some point the two men, a passenger and driver from the Corolla, were shot.
The passenger was shot in the shoulder. Emergency medical services (EMS) said they found a man in his 20s shot in the shoulder on the grass in that area when they arrived.
"The bystanders had a towel to stop the bleeding," said EMS paramedic Ryan Velthuizen.
EMS said the man shot in the shoulder was taken to University hospital with non- life-threatening injuries.
Police said the Corolla's driver later ditched the car in the area.
"That second man ran from the vehicle and into a nearby home where the homeowners called police," said McLeod.
"It appears the man was taking refuge in the home."
A police tactical unit was called and the man was later transported by EMS to the Royal Alexandra Hospital. EMS said he had been shot in the elbow and suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
McLeod said at least two shots were fired and a couple of casings were recovered by police last night.
"We're not entirely sure what weapon was used at this point, but it may have been a shotgun," said McLeod.
Police recovered the maroon Corolla close to where the shooting took place.
Cops were still looking for a Chevy vehicle late last night. Officers had sealed off an area near 158A Avenue and 88 Street.
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Post by Sher on May 13, 2005 13:09:27 GMT -5
Stony Plain RCMP are investigating a serious crash at a crosswalk yesterday afternoon.
They say a man was crossing 48 Street around 1:20 p.m. at the 50 Avenue junction when he was hit by a left-turning 1992 Chev Silverado.
"He was dragged for about 15 feet," said Const. Craig Albers. "He's gone to the Royal Alexandra Hospital with undisclosed injuries." No condition update was available last night.
The 49-year-old woman driving the truck is expected to face a charge of failing to yield to a pedestrian.
Senior crash victim identified
Meanwhile, Stony Plain RCMP have identified Mary Lehay of Spruce Grove as the senior killed Friday afternoon when the minivan she was travelling in was rear-ended by a pickup truck on Highway 16.
The 85-year-old died at the scene of the crash 24 km west of Stony Plain. Her 80-year-old sister, Edna Heintz, was taken to hospital but released after treatment.
The 38-year-old driver of the pickup truck was also treated in hospital and released.
Alcohol is not believed to be a factor in the crash and the investigation is continuing.
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Post by Sher on May 15, 2005 15:15:26 GMT -5
A dead man in his late teens or early 20s found on a dirt road near Morinville has RCMP pleading for help to identify him and crack the case.
"The investigators feel that it is a suspicious death," said Const. Laurel Kading of the Morinville detachment, who would not elaborate on why investigators think it might be a homicide.
"We are asking for assistance from the community. We have people checking missing persons records right now. Up to this point, we have no matches."
Mounties got the call about the body late Thursday night after an area resident found it on the road about two kilometres north of Township Road 564 and Range Road 270, which is 15 km northwest of Morinville, 47 km north of Edmonton.
"It would appear the body had not been there long ... we definitely don't think it was there more than a day or so," Kading said, adding the man appeared to be in his late teens or early 20s. An autopsy is scheduled for Monday.
Grant Friedrich, who lives about one kilometre north of the scene, was driving home when he saw the corpse off to the side of the road.
"He wasn't hidden or anything," Friedrich said yesterday, still upset by the grisly find. He said he stopped and checked the man's pulse, noticing "blood coming out of his eyes."
Friedrich, who works in the oil industry, said he didn't notice any evidence around the body. The man was found on the road at the bottom of a gully, Friedrich said.
Police yesterday had barricaded a long stretch of road to protect the scene.
K Division's major crimes investigators were on scene, as were forensics teams and the special tactical operations team. Police dogs combed the area and Kading figured officers would be finished at the scene late yesterday.
"This is a very quiet farming community and this is highly unusual," Kading said.
Friedrich's father, Richard, a farmer, lives on the property neighbouring his son's. He said the body find was "too close" to home. "Far too close. We don't need that kind of excitement around here."
Richard said he'd been asked by a Mountie if he'd heard any gunshots Thursday night. He hadn't.
The last time the Morinville detachment investigated a homicide was 2001. American bank robber Kenneth Lloyd Pendleton's body was found with a plastic bag over his head near Morinville on Jan. 11, 2001. He'd been beaten and stabbed. The case remains unsolved.
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Post by Sher on May 16, 2005 11:03:07 GMT -5
One man is dead and four other people are injured after multiple shootings at a house party in the city's west end yesterday.
"It seems to be a group of party-goers where the party got out of control," said homicide unit Det. Bill Clark. "Someone got mad at someone and a fight erupted and, as a result, we have some severe injuries and somebody died.
"No one expects people to die just because they're at a house party."
Shortly after 3 a.m. cops and paramedics were summoned to a bungalow at 152 Street and 97 Avenue after neighbours complained about a noisy party.
"I heard a girl scream," said Joanna Stauffer, who was sleeping with her window open. Police were on scene within minutes, she said.
"I've never seen so many cop cars in my life."
Leslie Wutzke said she was jolted awake by flashing blue police lights.
"You could hear lots of yelling," said Wutzke. "Then the police were on the blowhorn and you could hear them yelling. They were saying, 'Get your hands up! Get your hands up!' "
She said three "young boys" walked past her home and one yelled, "My brother's been killed, my brother's been killed.''
Cops found a group of people milling around at the scene outside the home, including one person with a chest wound, Clark said.
"It was a scene of panic," said Sgt. Blair Edl, the first officer inside the house.
Along with the drunken party-goers, Edl found three injured people inside the house, including an unconscious man. His buddy was trying to revive him, he said.
"But he was doing it wrong," said Edl, a police officer for 13 years, who took over attempts to revive the man with CPR.
Edl said he worked on the unconscious man for what seemed an eternity before paramedics arrived. But another police officer on the scene helped with CPR attempts all the way to University of Alberta Hospital, Edl said.
The man later died in hospital.
Emergency medical services Supt. Kevin O'Keefe said three males and one female were taken to hospital suffering from gunshot wounds.
But police said they will wait for autopsy results, likely Tuesday, before definitively saying how the man died.
A fifth person was found suffering "soft tissue" injuries about a block from the scene and was treated by paramedics. He did not require hospitalization.
Police have descriptions of suspects and took about 20 party-goers to the west division station to be interviewed.
"We don't know if there's two groups involved but they were all partying at the same house," Clark said.
Neighbours said they'd seen "souped up" cars coming to and leaving the area. Many of them had dark, tinted windows and blasted rap music from their speakers.
The house was notorious for loud parties and Clark confirmed patrol officers had been called to quell parties in the past.
cont..
Homicide investigators hope to find out today if a man killed when someone started shooting at a west-end house party on the weekend was also stabbed.
An autopsy is expected to be carried out today on the unnamed 20-year-old who died after the shooting incident at 9742 152 St. around 3 a.m. Sunday.
"There is the possibility that he might have been stabbed," said Det. Bill Clark.
Clark said the autopsy will also let police know more about the weapon used in the shooting.
The 20-year-old died in hospital. Three other people, including a young female, were found suffering from serious gunshot wounds in the bungalow home. Another young man was discovered a block away with a superficial wound.
Witnesses told police that a man pulled a gun at the party and started shooting after an argument got out of hand.
Clark said it is believed that there were around 50 people at the party. Police have interviewed about a dozen so far.
"They have been very helpful," he said. "But once the gun was out, their attention tended to focus on that and they may have missed other things.
"The people we really need to talk to are the ones who left before officers arrived."
He added that gang affiliations and drug ties haven't been ruled out as factors in the incident.
"It's pretty certain there would have been drugs at the party. But it's way too early to say if the dispute was drug-related."
One of the neighbours helped bandage the arm of one of the people shot.
"I was in the bathtub when I heard five shots," said Michelle. "I wasn't surprised because there are noisy parties there all the time, so I grabbed the kids and got them into the basement."
She then went to see what she could do to help.
"There was a kid with a bullet wound in his arm, but whoever had put the bandage on put it below the wound instead of above and the blood was pouring out."
She said she'd heard that her patient and two of the other people shot had been hit by bullets that came through the kitchen wall into the living room.
Yesterday, detectives were hoping to interview the three shooting victims in hospital. They are also looking into suggestions the dispute may have started at a nearby bar.
Yvette Tulinski, 20, said she had known the dead man since they were both kids. "He was in the wrong place at the wrong time trying to do the right thing. I heard there was a fist fight and one guy got scared and pulled a gun.
"It was all an innocent fight gone wrong."
Tulinski described the dead man as generous and kind.
"He was everyone's best friend. If you needed help, he was there for you, no matter what."
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Post by Sher on May 18, 2005 4:52:29 GMT -5
Cops are on the hunt for a carjacker who punched a tow-truck driver yesterday afternoon - and then tried to lick the blood off the driver's face.
Neal White of Auto Rescue Towing said he was responding to an accident when he came across another crash at 149 Street and 107 Avenue.
"I noticed a native guy walking in the middle of the road," he said. "Then I noticed my passenger side door opening up."
Police Insp. Ric Gagnon said the man had threatened a woman and taken her Mustang from 173 Street and 100 Avenue earlier.
He smashed the car into an SUV at 149 Street and 107 Avenue and tried unsuccessfully to get into a house before jumping into the cab of White's truck.
White said the man punched him in the nose, unleashing a torrent of blood. The man claimed to have a knife and tried crawling into the driver's seat.
White put the truck in gear and popped the clutch, causing the truck to stall, then jumped out.
"I was all wired up, I was freaking out."
The would-be hijacker tried unsuccessfully to start the vehicle. He then gave up, got out and ran, White said.
"I started chasing him and yelled, 'Don't even think about getting in another car!' "
Blood running down his nose and shirt, White caught up to the man. "He said, 'You have to wipe that blood up.'
"Then he took me by the back of the head and tried to lick the blood off. I pushed him away. It was like something you watch on TV."
The assailant tried getting into two other cars before jumping into a third, White said.
Gagnon said the suspect threatened the man and ordered him to drive him downtown and the man agreed.
Cops are looking for a native male, five-foot-nine, 200 pounds with short, red-dyed hair. He was wearing a black tracksuit with tear-away pants. He has tattoos up past his neck.
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Post by Sher on May 18, 2005 4:56:52 GMT -5
RCMP have identified a man found shot dead in a ditch near Morinville last Thursday as 20-year-old Geoffrey Robert Sohaba.
Sohaba's body was found at the bottom of a gully about two kilometres north of Township Road 564 and Range Road 270, about 15 km northwest of Edmonton, late Thursday night.
"It has been determined that a firearm was used in this homicide," said RCMP spokesman Const. Laurel Kading.
"Specific information concerning the number of wounds and the type of firearm used are not being released for investigative reasons."
Kading refused to comment on speculation that Sohaba had been the victim of a gang-style execution.
"There is no information to suggest that Sohaba was a member of any gang, but all avenues of investigation are being thoroughly probed," she said.
Morinville-based investigators have called on the assistance of the K Division Major Crimes Unit from Edmonton and the forensic unit.
Kading said Sohaba had South African connections.
His body was found by oilpatch worker Grant Friedrich.
He told the Sun last week that he was about a kilometre from home when he saw the corpse off to the side of the road.
Friedrich said the body had blood coming from its eyes.
Investigators do not believe the body had been there long.
Kading said there have not been many tips from the public so far, but releasing Sohaba's name may result in information coming forward about his activities in the days prior to his death.
In January 2001, the frozen body of notorious U.S. bank robber and jail breaker Ken Pendleton was found on Township Road 564 east of Highway 44.
He had a plastic bootlegger bag on his head and had been viciously stabbed and beaten.
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