Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting in the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia

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A woman is dead and a man is clinging to life after being shot in the city’s southwest Thursday, the latest incident in a spate of gun violence in Calgary.

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At approximately 8:20 a.m., police were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW where they found two gunshot victims in a dark brown Bentley sedan parked in a driveway. “The woman was pronounced dead at the scene, while the man was taken to hospital in life-threatening condition,” city police said in a news release. The car was in a neighbors driveway three doors down from the victims’ home at the time of the shooting. Blood splattered the street a few hours after the shooting. Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting on Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia None of the neighbors interviewed said they heard gunshots or saw attackers, but a woman who lives nearby said she heard a man screaming after the shooting and ran to help. “I saw a man in his car covered in blood — he was screaming . . . she wasn’t moving when I saw her,” said the neighbor, who chose to remain anonymous.

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“I brought a towel outside and one of the other neighbors did chest compressions. . . he continued to scream, “I’ve been shot.” “ The woman and next-door neighbor Segun Oshile said the couple, described as being in their 30s, had lived in a quiet cul-de-sac for years and were pleasant and friendly. Police identified the dead woman as Nakita Baron, 31, and neighbors said her husband, Talal, was the man shot next to her. “They’re great people, some of the nicest people in the neighborhood, fun and ready to help,” Oshile said, adding that he had just talked to the male shooting victim the day before. “My wife and his wife were very close – my wife is in shock at the moment.” He called the incident “a wake-up call,” suggesting that such shootings can happen anywhere in the city.

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UPDATE: Approx. At 8:20 am today, we were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW for reports of two people in medical trouble. Upon arrival, police located a man and woman in a parked vehicle suffering from gunshot wounds. — Calgary Police (@CalgaryPolice) August 18, 2022
Some of the nearby homes, including the home directly behind where the homicide occurred, are equipped with surveillance cameras. When the vehicle was towed five hours after the shooting, the driver’s window was partially down and there was no apparent damage to the car. A vehicle involved in a shooting is towed from Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia Police said they are examining CCTV footage and looking for a black Mitsubishi Eclipse SUV dated between 2017 and 2020 that they believe was at the scene of the shooting, which appears to be targeted. They are also looking for a suspect described as 25 to 35 years old, 5’8″ to 6′ tall and 180 pounds, and was wearing a dark blue hat with a black hood, a bright orange T-shirt with a yellow reflective vest and dark colored pants. “While this does not appear to be a random incident, it remains unknown which of the victims, or if both, were the targets of this brazen act of violence that occurred during a time when the families were active in the neighborhood,” said Staff Sgt. Sean Gregson said in a statement.

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Calgary police are asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect believed to be involved in a shooting that took place this morning on Everwoods Court SW. Photo by Calgary Police Service Police are asking anyone with information to call them at 403-266-1234 or Crime Stoppers. An autopsy on Baron is scheduled to be performed on Friday. It’s the latest shooting in a city increasingly troubled by guns this year. On Wednesday, police said there have been 91 shootings in Calgary so far this year — just five short of the city’s total of 96 for all of 2021. Up until last year, there had been 52 shootings in the city. However, they also said that less than 25 percent of those shootings are related to gangs or organized crime, with most of them involving personal disputes, road rage, drugs or random discharges. Police also announced they had laid 120 charges against nine people and seized several firearms in investigations they say are linked to organized crime and a string of shootings.

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This included the discovery by airport security of a Glock pistol inside a piece of luggage at Calgary International Airport on July 17. We apologize, but this video failed to load. Last May, Deputy Chief Paul Cook told the Calgary Police Commission that the risks of death or imprisonment are proving to be weak deterrents to gun control in Calgary. “I can tell you that for the vast majority of people that we deal with, those consequences don’t matter to them,” he said. “(They think) it’s better to be caught with a gun by the police than to be without a gun and meet one of their rivals.” Poor enforcement of existing firearms laws, particularly handguns that are illegally owned, stored and used, are contributing to the growing problem, Cook said.

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Police rely on members of the public who are aware of the presence of guns in the community to discourage and prevent their use while alerting police, he said. The growing spate of shootings in Calgary and elsewhere in Canada mirrors what’s happening in the U.S. and is heavily influenced by guns smuggled across the border from that country, said Mount Royal University criminologist Doug King. “We’re not going to see a decline (in shootings), we’re just going to see it increase more and more until we deal with the increase in illegal importation,” he said. He noted that police in Toronto, which has been plagued in recent years by gun violence, said 85 percent of guns used in crimes were illegally owned and acquired.

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But he said many firearms are also being funneled into Canada from Asia. “When a cargo ship comes into Vancouver, only 5 percent of the containers are inspected — that 5 percent is the price of doing business (for smugglers),” King said. The federal government recently announced a temporary ban on gun imports into Canada, which will take effect Friday. The move is intended to stop before politicians in Parliament debate permanent gun freeze legislation this autumn.

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King said Ottawa’s plans to strengthen the ban on firearms at the country’s borders is a good step, but added that its plan to stop gun sales will not have an immediate effect on shooting rates. “These firearms are not registered and the people using them are criminals,” he said. Some of the increased gun violence, he said, can be attributed to rising levels of hatred, conflict and family strife. This, combined with the easy availability of illegal weapons, leads to their rapid use, he said. “For many people in Canada and the U.S., owning a firearm is a status symbol, and young people are very susceptible to that,” King said. He said better funding of police investigative capabilities and a border ban were key to reducing gun violence which has a long-term toll, not only on its immediate victims, but also on those who live near them. “It increases the fear of crime (on their street) — it never goes back to zero,” King said. [email protected] Twitter: @BillKaufmannjrn

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title: “Woman Killed Man Injured Amid Rising Gun Violence In Calgary Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-13” author: “Keith Askins”


Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting in the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia

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A woman is dead and a man is clinging to life after being shot in the city’s southwest Thursday, the latest incident in a spate of gun violence in Calgary.

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At approximately 8:20 a.m., police were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW where they found two gunshot victims in a dark brown Bentley sedan parked in a driveway. “The woman was pronounced dead at the scene, while the man was taken to hospital in life-threatening condition,” city police said in a news release. The car was in a neighbors driveway three doors down from the victims’ home at the time of the shooting. Blood splattered the street a few hours after the shooting. Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting on Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia None of the neighbors interviewed said they heard gunshots or saw attackers, but a woman who lives nearby said she heard a man screaming after the shooting and ran to help. “I saw a man in his car covered in blood — he was screaming . . . she wasn’t moving when I saw her,” said the neighbor, who chose to remain anonymous.

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“I brought a towel outside and one of the other neighbors did chest compressions. . . he continued to scream, “I’ve been shot.” “ The woman and next-door neighbor Segun Oshile said the couple, described as being in their 30s, had lived in a quiet cul-de-sac for years and were pleasant and friendly. Police identified the dead woman as Nakita Baron, 31, and neighbors said her husband, Talal, was the man shot next to her. “They’re great people, some of the nicest people in the neighborhood, fun and ready to help,” Oshile said, adding that he had just talked to the male shooting victim the day before. “My wife and his wife were very close – my wife is in shock at the moment.” He called the incident “a wake-up call,” suggesting that such shootings can happen anywhere in the city.

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UPDATE: Approx. At 8:20 am today, we were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW for reports of two people in medical trouble. Upon arrival, police located a man and woman in a parked vehicle suffering from gunshot wounds. — Calgary Police (@CalgaryPolice) August 18, 2022
Some of the nearby homes, including the home directly behind where the homicide occurred, are equipped with surveillance cameras. When the vehicle was towed five hours after the shooting, the driver’s window was partially down and there was no apparent damage to the car. A vehicle involved in a shooting is towed from Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia Police said they are examining CCTV footage and looking for a black Mitsubishi Eclipse SUV dated between 2017 and 2020 that they believe was at the scene of the shooting, which appears to be targeted. They are also looking for a suspect described as 25 to 35 years old, 5’8″ to 6′ tall and 180 pounds, and was wearing a dark blue hat with a black hood, a bright orange T-shirt with a yellow reflective vest and dark colored pants. “While this does not appear to be a random incident, it remains unknown which of the victims, or if both, were the targets of this brazen act of violence that occurred during a time when the families were active in the neighborhood,” said Staff Sgt. Sean Gregson said in a statement.

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Calgary police are asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect believed to be involved in a shooting that took place this morning on Everwoods Court SW. Photo by Calgary Police Service Police are asking anyone with information to call them at 403-266-1234 or Crime Stoppers. An autopsy on Baron is scheduled to be performed on Friday. It’s the latest shooting in a city increasingly troubled by guns this year. On Wednesday, police said there have been 91 shootings in Calgary so far this year — just five short of the city’s total of 96 for all of 2021. Up until last year, there had been 52 shootings in the city. However, they also said that less than 25 percent of those shootings are related to gangs or organized crime, with most of them involving personal disputes, road rage, drugs or random discharges. Police also announced they had laid 120 charges against nine people and seized several firearms in investigations they say are linked to organized crime and a string of shootings.

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Content of the article

This included the discovery by airport security of a Glock pistol inside a piece of luggage at Calgary International Airport on July 17. We apologize, but this video failed to load. Last May, Deputy Chief Paul Cook told the Calgary Police Commission that the risks of death or imprisonment are proving to be weak deterrents to gun control in Calgary. “I can tell you that for the vast majority of people that we deal with, those consequences don’t matter to them,” he said. “(They think) it’s better to be caught with a gun by the police than to be without a gun and meet one of their rivals.” Poor enforcement of existing firearms laws, particularly handguns that are illegally owned, stored and used, are contributing to the growing problem, Cook said.

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Content of the article

Police rely on members of the public who are aware of the presence of guns in the community to discourage and prevent their use while alerting police, he said. The growing spate of shootings in Calgary and elsewhere in Canada mirrors what’s happening in the U.S. and is heavily influenced by guns smuggled across the border from that country, said Mount Royal University criminologist Doug King. “We’re not going to see a decline (in shootings), we’re just going to see it increase more and more until we deal with the increase in illegal importation,” he said. He noted that police in Toronto, which has been plagued in recent years by gun violence, said 85 percent of guns used in crimes were illegally owned and acquired.

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Content of the article

But he said many firearms are also being funneled into Canada from Asia. “When a cargo ship comes into Vancouver, only 5 percent of the containers are inspected — that 5 percent is the price of doing business (for smugglers),” King said. The federal government recently announced a temporary ban on gun imports into Canada, which will take effect Friday. The move is intended to stop before politicians in Parliament debate permanent gun freeze legislation this autumn.

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Content of the article

King said Ottawa’s plans to strengthen the ban on firearms at the country’s borders is a good step, but added that its plan to stop gun sales will not have an immediate effect on shooting rates. “These firearms are not registered and the people using them are criminals,” he said. Some of the increased gun violence, he said, can be attributed to rising levels of hatred, conflict and family strife. This, combined with the easy availability of illegal weapons, leads to their rapid use, he said. “For many people in Canada and the U.S., owning a firearm is a status symbol, and young people are very susceptible to that,” King said. He said better funding of police investigative capabilities and a border ban were key to reducing gun violence which has a long-term toll, not only on its immediate victims, but also on those who live near them. “It increases the fear of crime (on their street) — it never goes back to zero,” King said. [email protected] Twitter: @BillKaufmannjrn

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title: “Woman Killed Man Injured Amid Rising Gun Violence In Calgary Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-20” author: “Dorothy Vanwinkle”


Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting in the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia

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A woman is dead and a man is clinging to life after being shot in the city’s southwest Thursday, the latest incident in a spate of gun violence in Calgary.

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At approximately 8:20 a.m., police were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW where they found two gunshot victims in a dark brown Bentley sedan parked in a driveway. “The woman was pronounced dead at the scene, while the man was taken to hospital in life-threatening condition,” city police said in a news release. The car was in a neighbors driveway three doors down from the victims’ home at the time of the shooting. Blood splattered the street a few hours after the shooting. Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting on Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia None of the neighbors interviewed said they heard gunshots or saw attackers, but a woman who lives nearby said she heard a man screaming after the shooting and ran to help. “I saw a man in his car covered in blood — he was screaming . . . she wasn’t moving when I saw her,” said the neighbor, who chose to remain anonymous.

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“I brought a towel outside and one of the other neighbors did chest compressions. . . he continued to scream, “I’ve been shot.” “ The woman and next-door neighbor Segun Oshile said the couple, described as being in their 30s, had lived in a quiet cul-de-sac for years and were pleasant and friendly. Police identified the dead woman as Nakita Baron, 31, and neighbors said her husband, Talal, was the man shot next to her. “They’re great people, some of the nicest people in the neighborhood, fun and ready to help,” Oshile said, adding that he had just talked to the male shooting victim the day before. “My wife and his wife were very close – my wife is in shock at the moment.” He called the incident “a wake-up call,” suggesting that such shootings can happen anywhere in the city.

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UPDATE: Approx. At 8:20 am today, we were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW for reports of two people in medical trouble. Upon arrival, police located a man and woman in a parked vehicle suffering from gunshot wounds. — Calgary Police (@CalgaryPolice) August 18, 2022
Some of the nearby homes, including the home directly behind where the homicide occurred, are equipped with surveillance cameras. When the vehicle was towed five hours after the shooting, the driver’s window was partially down and there was no apparent damage to the car. A vehicle involved in a shooting is towed from Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia Police said they are examining CCTV footage and looking for a black Mitsubishi Eclipse SUV dated between 2017 and 2020 that they believe was at the scene of the shooting, which appears to be targeted. They are also looking for a suspect described as 25 to 35 years old, 5’8″ to 6′ tall and 180 pounds, and was wearing a dark blue hat with a black hood, a bright orange T-shirt with a yellow reflective vest and dark colored pants. “While this does not appear to be a random incident, it remains unknown which of the victims, or if both, were the targets of this brazen act of violence that occurred during a time when the families were active in the neighborhood,” said Staff Sgt. Sean Gregson said in a statement.

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Calgary police are asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect believed to be involved in a shooting that took place this morning on Everwoods Court SW. Photo by Calgary Police Service Police are asking anyone with information to call them at 403-266-1234 or Crime Stoppers. An autopsy on Baron is scheduled to be performed on Friday. It’s the latest shooting in a city increasingly troubled by guns this year. On Wednesday, police said there have been 91 shootings in Calgary so far this year — just five short of the city’s total of 96 for all of 2021. Up until last year, there had been 52 shootings in the city. However, they also said that less than 25 percent of those shootings are related to gangs or organized crime, with most of them involving personal disputes, road rage, drugs or random discharges. Police also announced they had laid 120 charges against nine people and seized several firearms in investigations they say are linked to organized crime and a string of shootings.

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Content of the article

This included the discovery by airport security of a Glock pistol inside a piece of luggage at Calgary International Airport on July 17. We apologize, but this video failed to load. Last May, Deputy Chief Paul Cook told the Calgary Police Commission that the risks of death or imprisonment are proving to be weak deterrents to gun control in Calgary. “I can tell you that for the vast majority of people that we deal with, those consequences don’t matter to them,” he said. “(They think) it’s better to be caught with a gun by the police than to be without a gun and meet one of their rivals.” Poor enforcement of existing firearms laws, particularly handguns that are illegally owned, stored and used, are contributing to the growing problem, Cook said.

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Content of the article

Police rely on members of the public who are aware of the presence of guns in the community to discourage and prevent their use while alerting police, he said. The growing spate of shootings in Calgary and elsewhere in Canada mirrors what’s happening in the U.S. and is heavily influenced by guns smuggled across the border from that country, said Mount Royal University criminologist Doug King. “We’re not going to see a decline (in shootings), we’re just going to see it increase more and more until we deal with the increase in illegal importation,” he said. He noted that police in Toronto, which has been plagued in recent years by gun violence, said 85 percent of guns used in crimes were illegally owned and acquired.

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Content of the article

But he said many firearms are also being funneled into Canada from Asia. “When a cargo ship comes into Vancouver, only 5 percent of the containers are inspected — that 5 percent is the price of doing business (for smugglers),” King said. The federal government recently announced a temporary ban on gun imports into Canada, which will take effect Friday. The move is intended to stop before politicians in Parliament debate permanent gun freeze legislation this autumn.

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Content of the article

King said Ottawa’s plans to strengthen the ban on firearms at the country’s borders is a good step, but added that its plan to stop gun sales will not have an immediate effect on shooting rates. “These firearms are not registered and the people using them are criminals,” he said. Some of the increased gun violence, he said, can be attributed to rising levels of hatred, conflict and family strife. This, combined with the easy availability of illegal weapons, leads to their rapid use, he said. “For many people in Canada and the U.S., owning a firearm is a status symbol, and young people are very susceptible to that,” King said. He said better funding of police investigative capabilities and a border ban were key to reducing gun violence which has a long-term toll, not only on its immediate victims, but also on those who live near them. “It increases the fear of crime (on their street) — it never goes back to zero,” King said. [email protected] Twitter: @BillKaufmannjrn

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Sign up to receive daily news headlines from the Calgary Herald, a division of Postmedia Network Inc. By clicking the subscribe button you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link at the bottom of our emails. Postmedia Network Inc. | 365 Bloor Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4W 3L4 | 416-383-2300

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title: “Woman Killed Man Injured Amid Rising Gun Violence In Calgary Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-10-31” author: “Rufus Miller”


Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting in the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia

Content of the article

A woman is dead and a man is clinging to life after being shot in the city’s southwest Thursday, the latest incident in a spate of gun violence in Calgary.

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Content of the article

At approximately 8:20 a.m., police were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW where they found two gunshot victims in a dark brown Bentley sedan parked in a driveway. “The woman was pronounced dead at the scene, while the man was taken to hospital in life-threatening condition,” city police said in a news release. The car was in a neighbors driveway three doors down from the victims’ home at the time of the shooting. Blood splattered the street a few hours after the shooting. Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting on Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia None of the neighbors interviewed said they heard gunshots or saw attackers, but a woman who lives nearby said she heard a man screaming after the shooting and ran to help. “I saw a man in his car covered in blood — he was screaming . . . she wasn’t moving when I saw her,” said the neighbor, who chose to remain anonymous.

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“I brought a towel outside and one of the other neighbors did chest compressions. . . he continued to scream, “I’ve been shot.” “ The woman and next-door neighbor Segun Oshile said the couple, described as being in their 30s, had lived in a quiet cul-de-sac for years and were pleasant and friendly. Police identified the dead woman as Nakita Baron, 31, and neighbors said her husband, Talal, was the man shot next to her. “They’re great people, some of the nicest people in the neighborhood, fun and ready to help,” Oshile said, adding that he had just talked to the male shooting victim the day before. “My wife and his wife were very close – my wife is in shock at the moment.” He called the incident “a wake-up call,” suggesting that such shootings can happen anywhere in the city.

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UPDATE: Approx. At 8:20 am today, we were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW for reports of two people in medical trouble. Upon arrival, police located a man and woman in a parked vehicle suffering from gunshot wounds. — Calgary Police (@CalgaryPolice) August 18, 2022
Some of the nearby homes, including the home directly behind where the homicide occurred, are equipped with surveillance cameras. When the vehicle was towed five hours after the shooting, the driver’s window was partially down and there was no apparent damage to the car. A vehicle involved in a shooting is towed from Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia Police said they are examining CCTV footage and looking for a black Mitsubishi Eclipse SUV dated between 2017 and 2020 that they believe was at the scene of the shooting, which appears to be targeted. They are also looking for a suspect described as 25 to 35 years old, 5’8″ to 6′ tall and 180 pounds, and was wearing a dark blue hat with a black hood, a bright orange T-shirt with a yellow reflective vest and dark colored pants. “While this does not appear to be a random incident, it remains unknown which of the victims, or if both, were the targets of this brazen act of violence that occurred during a time when the families were active in the neighborhood,” said Staff Sgt. Sean Gregson said in a statement.

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Calgary police are asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect believed to be involved in a shooting that took place this morning on Everwoods Court SW. Photo by Calgary Police Service Police are asking anyone with information to call them at 403-266-1234 or Crime Stoppers. An autopsy on Baron is scheduled to be performed on Friday. It’s the latest shooting in a city increasingly troubled by guns this year. On Wednesday, police said there have been 91 shootings in Calgary so far this year — just five short of the city’s total of 96 for all of 2021. Up until last year, there had been 52 shootings in the city. However, they also said that less than 25 percent of those shootings are related to gangs or organized crime, with most of them involving personal disputes, road rage, drugs or random discharges. Police also announced they had laid 120 charges against nine people and seized several firearms in investigations they say are linked to organized crime and a string of shootings.

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Content of the article

This included the discovery by airport security of a Glock pistol inside a piece of luggage at Calgary International Airport on July 17. We apologize, but this video failed to load. Last May, Deputy Chief Paul Cook told the Calgary Police Commission that the risks of death or imprisonment are proving to be weak deterrents to gun control in Calgary. “I can tell you that for the vast majority of people that we deal with, those consequences don’t matter to them,” he said. “(They think) it’s better to be caught with a gun by the police than to be without a gun and meet one of their rivals.” Poor enforcement of existing firearms laws, particularly handguns that are illegally owned, stored and used, are contributing to the growing problem, Cook said.

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Police rely on members of the public who are aware of the presence of guns in the community to discourage and prevent their use while alerting police, he said. The growing spate of shootings in Calgary and elsewhere in Canada mirrors what’s happening in the U.S. and is heavily influenced by guns smuggled across the border from that country, said Mount Royal University criminologist Doug King. “We’re not going to see a decline (in shootings), we’re just going to see it increase more and more until we deal with the increase in illegal importation,” he said. He noted that police in Toronto, which has been plagued in recent years by gun violence, said 85 percent of guns used in crimes were illegally owned and acquired.

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Content of the article

But he said many firearms are also being funneled into Canada from Asia. “When a cargo ship comes into Vancouver, only 5 percent of the containers are inspected — that 5 percent is the price of doing business (for smugglers),” King said. The federal government recently announced a temporary ban on gun imports into Canada, which will take effect Friday. The move is intended to stop before politicians in Parliament debate permanent gun freeze legislation this autumn.

This ad hasn’t loaded yet, but your article continues below. 

Content of the article

King said Ottawa’s plans to strengthen the ban on firearms at the country’s borders is a good step, but added that its plan to stop gun sales will not have an immediate effect on shooting rates. “These firearms are not registered and the people using them are criminals,” he said. Some of the increased gun violence, he said, can be attributed to rising levels of hatred, conflict and family strife. This, combined with the easy availability of illegal weapons, leads to their rapid use, he said. “For many people in Canada and the U.S., owning a firearm is a status symbol, and young people are very susceptible to that,” King said. He said better funding of police investigative capabilities and a border ban were key to reducing gun violence which has a long-term toll, not only on its immediate victims, but also on those who live near them. “It increases the fear of crime (on their street) — it never goes back to zero,” King said. [email protected] Twitter: @BillKaufmannjrn

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Sign up to receive daily news headlines from the Calgary Herald, a division of Postmedia Network Inc. By clicking the subscribe button you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link at the bottom of our emails. Postmedia Network Inc. | 365 Bloor Street East, Toronto, Ontario, M4W 3L4 | 416-383-2300

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title: “Woman Killed Man Injured Amid Rising Gun Violence In Calgary Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-13” author: “Mike Osborne”


Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting in the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia

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A woman is dead and a man is clinging to life after being shot in the city’s southwest Thursday, the latest incident in a spate of gun violence in Calgary.

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At approximately 8:20 a.m., police were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW where they found two gunshot victims in a dark brown Bentley sedan parked in a driveway. “The woman was pronounced dead at the scene, while the man was taken to hospital in life-threatening condition,” city police said in a news release. The car was in a neighbors driveway three doors down from the victims’ home at the time of the shooting. Blood splattered the street a few hours after the shooting. Calgary police investigate the scene of a shooting on Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia None of the neighbors interviewed said they heard gunshots or saw attackers, but a woman who lives nearby said she heard a man screaming after the shooting and ran to help. “I saw a man in his car covered in blood — he was screaming . . . she wasn’t moving when I saw her,” said the neighbor, who chose to remain anonymous.

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“I brought a towel outside and one of the other neighbors did chest compressions. . . he continued to scream, “I’ve been shot.” “ The woman and next-door neighbor Segun Oshile said the couple, described as being in their 30s, had lived in a quiet cul-de-sac for years and were pleasant and friendly. Police identified the dead woman as Nakita Baron, 31, and neighbors said her husband, Talal, was the man shot next to her. “They’re great people, some of the nicest people in the neighborhood, fun and ready to help,” Oshile said, adding that he had just talked to the male shooting victim the day before. “My wife and his wife were very close – my wife is in shock at the moment.” He called the incident “a wake-up call,” suggesting that such shootings can happen anywhere in the city.

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UPDATE: Approx. At 8:20 am today, we were called to the 100 block of Everwoods Court SW for reports of two people in medical trouble. Upon arrival, police located a man and woman in a parked vehicle suffering from gunshot wounds. — Calgary Police (@CalgaryPolice) August 18, 2022
Some of the nearby homes, including the home directly behind where the homicide occurred, are equipped with surveillance cameras. When the vehicle was towed five hours after the shooting, the driver’s window was partially down and there was no apparent damage to the car. A vehicle involved in a shooting is towed from Everwoods Court SW in Calgary on Thursday. Jim Wells/Postmedia Police said they are examining CCTV footage and looking for a black Mitsubishi Eclipse SUV dated between 2017 and 2020 that they believe was at the scene of the shooting, which appears to be targeted. They are also looking for a suspect described as 25 to 35 years old, 5’8″ to 6′ tall and 180 pounds, and was wearing a dark blue hat with a black hood, a bright orange T-shirt with a yellow reflective vest and dark colored pants. “While this does not appear to be a random incident, it remains unknown which of the victims, or if both, were the targets of this brazen act of violence that occurred during a time when the families were active in the neighborhood,” said Staff Sgt. Sean Gregson said in a statement.

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Calgary police are asking for the public’s help in locating a suspect believed to be involved in a shooting that took place this morning on Everwoods Court SW. Photo by Calgary Police Service Police are asking anyone with information to call them at 403-266-1234 or Crime Stoppers. An autopsy on Baron is scheduled to be performed on Friday. It’s the latest shooting in a city increasingly troubled by guns this year. On Wednesday, police said there have been 91 shootings in Calgary so far this year — just five short of the city’s total of 96 for all of 2021. Up until last year, there had been 52 shootings in the city. However, they also said that less than 25 percent of those shootings are related to gangs or organized crime, with most of them involving personal disputes, road rage, drugs or random discharges. Police also announced they had laid 120 charges against nine people and seized several firearms in investigations they say are linked to organized crime and a string of shootings.

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This included the discovery by airport security of a Glock pistol inside a piece of luggage at Calgary International Airport on July 17. We apologize, but this video failed to load. Last May, Deputy Chief Paul Cook told the Calgary Police Commission that the risks of death or imprisonment are proving to be weak deterrents to gun control in Calgary. “I can tell you that for the vast majority of people that we deal with, those consequences don’t matter to them,” he said. “(They think) it’s better to be caught with a gun by the police than to be without a gun and meet one of their rivals.” Poor enforcement of existing firearms laws, particularly handguns that are illegally owned, stored and used, are contributing to the growing problem, Cook said.

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Police rely on members of the public who are aware of the presence of guns in the community to discourage and prevent their use while alerting police, he said. The growing spate of shootings in Calgary and elsewhere in Canada mirrors what’s happening in the U.S. and is heavily influenced by guns smuggled across the border from that country, said Mount Royal University criminologist Doug King. “We’re not going to see a decline (in shootings), we’re just going to see it increase more and more until we deal with the increase in illegal importation,” he said. He noted that police in Toronto, which has been plagued in recent years by gun violence, said 85 percent of guns used in crimes were illegally owned and acquired.

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But he said many firearms are also being funneled into Canada from Asia. “When a cargo ship comes into Vancouver, only 5 percent of the containers are inspected — that 5 percent is the price of doing business (for smugglers),” King said. The federal government recently announced a temporary ban on gun imports into Canada, which will take effect Friday. The move is intended to stop before politicians in Parliament debate permanent gun freeze legislation this autumn.

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King said Ottawa’s plans to strengthen the ban on firearms at the country’s borders is a good step, but added that its plan to stop gun sales will not have an immediate effect on shooting rates. “These firearms are not registered and the people using them are criminals,” he said. Some of the increased gun violence, he said, can be attributed to rising levels of hatred, conflict and family strife. This, combined with the easy availability of illegal weapons, leads to their rapid use, he said. “For many people in Canada and the U.S., owning a firearm is a status symbol, and young people are very susceptible to that,” King said. He said better funding of police investigative capabilities and a border ban were key to reducing gun violence which has a long-term toll, not only on its immediate victims, but also on those who live near them. “It increases the fear of crime (on their street) — it never goes back to zero,” King said. [email protected] Twitter: @BillKaufmannjrn

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Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourages all readers to share their views on our articles.  Comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing…