Ojibway father of 7 identified as man who died after being shot by police bean bag gun in Vancouver
CBC
The man who died Monday morning after being shot multiple times with a bean bag gun by Vancouver police has been identified by family members as Chris Amyotte, a 42-year-old father of seven from Winnipeg.
Amyotte's cousin Samantha Wilson told CBC that he was in Vancouver visiting family, including two of his children.
Wilson said according to eyewitnesses, including another cousin, Amyotte was distraught after being sprayed with mace in the moments before police arrived on the scene.
"He was asking bystanders for help, to call 911. I know that when help did arrive he was non-compliant with their request to lie on the ground and shots were fired and he lost his life," she said.
WATCH | Samantha Wilson speaks about the death of her cousin in Vancouver:
"He was an unarmed man basically begging for help. He was in obvious pain from the mace that was all over his clothes and into his skin. One eyewitness shared that he tried to use water to lessen the effects of the bear mace that was on him and it actually made it worse," she said.
Witnesses told CBC that Amyotte had removed his clothes and was dousing himself in milk taken from a convenience store in the 300-block of East Hastings Street, right before he was shot and died on the sidewalk.
The Vancouver Police Department has said little about the incident other than to release a brief statement that did not mention the shooting. It read in part: "Following an interaction with police, the man was taken into custody. He then went into medical distress and lost consciousness. The man died at the scene despite life-saving attempts."
On Tuesday, a VPD spokesman confirmed police shot the man with a bean bag gun but did not answer the question of whether he was unarmed, instead directing inquiries to the province's Independent Investigations Office (IIO), B.C.'s civilian-led police oversight agency. A spokesperson for the IIO said they could not comment on the specifics of the case at this time.
Former West Vancouver police chief and former B.C. public safety minister Kash Heed says shotguns outfitted to fire bean bag rounds are identified by a brightly coloured barrel to mark them as a "less lethal option."
"It's a munition that's compressed in what looks like a shotgun shell and it's discharged from a shotgun," he told CBC.
"It's meant to stun [an individual] for that instantaneous second where police officers can consider what option they have available at this point, or take the individual into custody," he said.
Heed says he's never seen someone die solely from being hit by a bean bag round.
Wilson said Amyotte was a dedicated father and husband whose family comes from the Rolling River First Nation in Manitoba, an Ojibway community.
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