The family of a Black man shot and killed by police in a Montreal suburb on Sunday wants to know why officers opened fire.
Jean-René Junior Olivier’s family told reporters gathered outside his mother’s home on Monday they had called police because they were concerned for his well-being and wanted him to get help. Instead, they said, he received three bullets in the stomach just a few houses over from his mother’s home on a leafy residential street in Repentigny, Que., just north of Montreal.
“I’m very angry about what happened, I called for help and they killed my son,” Marie-Mireille Bence, the victim’s mother, said. “A 37-year-old man, they gunned him down, he was not dangerous,” she added. “He didn’t have a gun on him, he just had a knife on him.”
The family says Olivier had discarded the knife on the ground before police shot him.
“He threw the knife on the ground and that’s when they shot him, they shot him three times,” Bence said. “I called for help and I lost my son, I find it absurd because there were other ways of dealing with this, of bringing him under control.”
The death has Olivier’s mother thinking twice about calling police. “If tomorrow I have another problem, will I call 911? Not at all, because I do not have confidence in the police,” Bence said.
READ MORE: BEI opens investigation after man was shot dead by police in Repentigny
Quebec’s police watchdog began investigating the death on Sunday. It said in a statement that according to Repentigny police, officers responded to a 911 call just after 7:30 a.m. Sunday regarding an allegedly confused and unstable man armed with a knife.
They said police found the man outside and tried to speak to him but he fled on foot and allegedly became threatening toward officers. The watchdog said police used pepper spray to try and subdue the man but failed and then shot him multiple times.
Montreal-based civil rights group Center for Research-Action on Race Relations is assisting the family. Executive director Fo Niemi told reporters the Repentigny police force has been criticized for the way it has treated Black residents. City police have been hit with at least four complaints for racial profiling before the province’s human rights commission and Niemi said several other complaints are forthcoming.
Dolmiel Laguerre, Olivier’s cousin, said she’s outraged. The mother of three, also a Repentigny resident, said she feels unsafe in the community. During the news conference, she showed the small kitchen knife Olivier allegedly had in his possession and questioned why six officers and three bullets were necessary to bring Olivier under control.
“The family wants answers, the family wants justice and the family wants to know what happened,” Laguerre said. “If you come to Repentigny, do you feel that we’re safe? Do you feel that we have to hide? Our skin colour speaks for us.”
Kayshawn Olivier, one of the victim’s sons, said he has only one question for authorities.
“All we want is answers,” he said. “The question is why three bullets.”