READ MORE:Horror moment Brit tourist stabbed over and over while fighting off 4 robbersHalf-an-hour earlier an emergency warning was issued by police over a person with a knife travelling in a vehicle who was last seen in Wakaw, about 50 miles northeast of Saskatoon.An alert by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police has since said."There is no longer a risk to public safety relating to this investigation,"Myles now faces multiple charges, including first-degree murder.His brother Damien, 31, was found dead by police on Monday at the James Smith Cree Nation, a close-knit indigenous community in central Saskatchewan.Investigators believe some of the victims were "targeted" while others were "attacked randomly," RCMP Commanding Officer Assistant Commissioner Rhonda Blackmore said earlier this week.The Saskatchewan RCMP got its first call about a stabbing on Sunday.
Within minutes, police received several more calls from multiple locations. In total, victims were found at 13 different locations across the populated reserve and in the town, according to Blackmore.The horrific attacks were among the deadliest in Canada's modern history with victims including a mother of two, a 77-year-old widower, a first responder and a 14-year-old boy.At an emotional news conference on Wednesday, relatives of the victims spoke of the "horror" of the attack that has stunned the country."We are broken, but we're not defeated," said Mark Arcand, chief of the Saskatoon Tribal Council.
Parole documents show Myles has a decades-long criminal record, including 59 criminal convictions since he was 18, including assault, threats, and robbery.
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