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Police say Baumgartner search now 'international manhunt'

University mall 'fully operational' this weekend

 

Posted: Jun 16, 2012 9:49 AM MT

Last Updated: Jun 16, 2012 3:27 PM MT

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Michelle Shegelski was named as one of the employees of G4S who was slain early Friday at the University of Alberta.

Michelle Shegelski was named as one of the employees of G4S who was slain early Friday at the University of Alberta. (Facebook)

 

Edmonton police are are pleading with friends and family to come forward if they’ve been contacted by the man accused of killing three armoured-car guards in a robbery early Friday morning.

 

On Saturday afternoon, police called the search for Travis Brandon Baumgartner an “international manhunt,” with Canadian and US border security involved.

 

Police have charged Baumgartner with three counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder after four guards from G4S Security were shot while refilling an ATM on the University of Alberta campus.

Baumgartner worked for the same company as the victims.

 

Also on Saturday, tactical teams stormed a chapel inside City Centre Mall in downtown Edmonton following a tip that the suspect had been spotted inside. A man was arrested and released, and police are calling it a false alarm.

 

An abandoned armoured car was later found hours after the robbery, halfway across town near a G4S office with its lights on and its motor running.

 

Baumgartner's mother made a plea to her son late Friday to turn himself in. She alluded to a fight the two had before the shooting and apologized to her son.

 

"I'm sorry that we had an argument last night and that we had bad words between us, but I want you to come home and do the right thing. Let's work this out together," she said in a statement read by police.

 

Friends say Baumgartner had designs on being a police officer, but settled into a job with G4S instead after deciding he didn't have what it takes for law enforcement.

 

He likes video games and calls himself a recreational drug user. In an online dating profile, he says he is a "great guy" who is laid back and has a "10" physique.

 

But his Facebook page is much darker, quoting the anarchist Joker from the movie Dark Knight and musing about "popping people off."

 

Police have also released some details about the people Baumgartner allegedly killed.

 

Michelle Shegelski was 26 and had just gotten married to her husband, Victor, a former military man who, coincidentally, had just returned to school at the University of Alberta. Eddie Rejano, 39, and Brian Ilesic, 35, were the other two guards killed.

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Travis Baumgartner – Edmonton Police seek him and warn he is likely armed and dangerous.


Article:

Mother of Travis Baumgartner – I ask that you come forward now and take responsibility for your actions

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FM

Edmonton triple-murder suspect arrested in B.C.

 

Posted: Jun 16, 2012 7:15 PM MT

Last Updated: Jun 16, 2012 7:11 PM MT

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The man wanted in connection wiuth a deadly armoured car heist at the University of Alberta has been arrested in British Columbia, police say..

 

Travis Baumgartner, 21, was stopped near a border crossing in Lynden, Wash.,, near the U.S.-Canada border southwest of Abbotsford, Edmonton police Sgt. Dave Reitzel said Saturday.

 

Baumgartner was alone in his pickup truck, Reitzel said.

 

Police have been searching for Baumgartner following an armoured-car robbery at the University of Alberta on Friday that left three guards dead and another seriously wounded.

 

Baumgartner has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder.

FM

Alberta triple murder suspect in custody

Baumgartner arrested at U.S. border

 

 

Travis Baumgartner is taken out of a van by Canadian Border Services officers at the Aldergrove, B.C., border crossing on Saturday.

Photograph by: Canadian Press , Postmedia News

 

Accused triple murder suspect Travis Baumgartner will remain in RCMP custody in Langley, B.C., until later this week, while Edmonton police investigators comb through his truck and belongings for evidence.

 

A two-day manhunt following multiple deaths at the University of Alberta's Hub Mall early Friday morning ended Saturday afternoon when Baumgartner arrived at the border crossing between Aldergrove, B.C., and Lynden, Wash., with $330,000 in cash, his mother's stolen licence plate on the back of his Ford F-150, his own driver's licence and no passport.

 

"Everybody is now relieved that he is in custody," said Edmonton Police Supt. Bob Hassel.

 

Baumgartner was detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection and arrested on a Canada-wide warrant by RCMP officers from Langley. Hassel said Baumgartner was apprehended peacefully and without incident.

"Quite frankly, I'm very happy with the way that it ended," Hassel said.

 

U.S. Customs and Border Protection first discovered an armed-anddangerous alert when they scanned the back of Baumgartner's truck with a computerized licence-plate reader. Officers approached the truck and took him into custody without a fight at about 3: 10 p.m. local time. Baumgartner did not have a gun.

 

Baumgartner was handcuffed and put into a holding cell while border guards confirmed his identity. Because he hadn't entered the United States, he was turned over to Canadian authorities.

 

Hassel credited Baumgartner's capture to quick communication between law enforcement agencies. Border agencies were notified of Baumgartner within four hours of the shooting, he said.

 

Baumgartner faces three first-degree murder charges in the deaths of his fellow armoured car guards Michelle Shegelski, 26; Brian Ilesic, 35; and Eddie Rejano, 39. He is also charged with attempted murder in the shooting of another guard, Matthew Schuman, who remained in critical condition in hospital on Sunday afternoon, and four counts of armed robbery.

 

Police have been in touch with all the families involved, including Baumgartner's mother, Sandy.

 

Eight Edmonton police officers, including five detectives and three forensics investigators, flew to B.C. Saturday night and are currently "sifting through evidence," Hassel added.

 

A weapon and body armour, issued by the security company that employed Baumgartner and the victims of Friday morning's shootings, have not yet been recovered.

 

The four victims and alleged killer were employees of G4S Cash Solutions, an armoured car company. They were shot while delivering money to cash machines at the University of Alberta's Hub Mall early Friday morning.

 

After news of the arrest, the family of victim Eddie Rejano gathered at HUB Mall for a candlelit vigil at the scene of the deaths.

 

"I'm happy, but at the same time it does nothing. He's caught, but it's not going to bring (Eddie) back," said Paul Badon, Rejano's brotherin-law.

 

Eddie Rejano's wife, Cleo, clutched their four-year-old son, Xylar, to her chest as other family members laid down bouquets of flowers.

 

Vanessa Mejia said although she wasn't related to Rejano, she thought of him as a brother.

 

"We were all watching the news yesterday, waiting for him to come in and do his shy little 'Hi,' " she said, tears rolling down her cheeks.

 

Mejia commended Cleo for staying strong for the couple's two boys.

 

The Aldergrove/Lynden border crossing is about 22 kilometres southwest of Abbotsford, B.C. and about 1,100 km from Edmonton.

 

Baumgartner's arrest came just hours after Hassel said Baumgartner was believed to have a significant amount of money, a bulletproof vest from his G4S armoured guard uniform, and, most likely, his G4S-issue handgun. At that time, there had been no substantiated sightings of Baumgartner since the shooting, and police did not know whether he was in the city or on the run.

 

Solicitor General Jonathan Denis said Saturday night he expected the process of getting Baumgartner back to Edmonton, to answer to the charges, to get underway swiftly.

 

"I'm happy that they've apprehended the suspect and even, on top of that, that he was apprehended without issue," Denis said.

 

"Any other scenario could have ended very badly."

 

Jayme Stephenson, a former G4S employee who knew Schuman, Rejano and Baumgartner, said she was "ecstatic" about the arrest.

 

"I hope that justice is served when it comes to his sentencing," she said.

 

She said she was "sickened" by the fact that she had spoken to Baumgartner during their training, and that he was part of their group.

 

"We were taught to look after each other and protect ourselves and you're supposed to have each other's back in that job. It was all a lie with Travis."

 

In a post on Facebook on June 1, Baumgartner wrote: "I wonder if I'd make the 6 o'clock news if I just started poping (sic) people off."

 

The 21-year-old describes himself on the Plenty of Fish dating website as "very laid-back," a "people person" who is easy to get to know, and behaves like "a gentlemen" (sic) on dates.

 

His profile runs with the caption "I'm a great guy, we don't come along very often."

 

But some of Baumgartner's posts on social media paint a very different picture.

 

A June 5 post on Twitter reads: "Crosses to burn, axes to fall and down on your knees you don't look so tall," a lyric from the Billy Talent song, Viking Death March.

 

On Thursday, in the hours before the shooting, Baumgartner quoted the Joker from the movie The Dark Knight, tweeting: "One night she grabs a kitchen knife to defend herself, now he doesn't like that - not - one - bit."

 

Baumgartner lived in a Sherwood Park bungalow with his mother, Sandy. He graduated from Bev Facey High School in Sherwood Park in 2009.

FM
Originally Posted by Chief:

DG, tHIS YOUR FINAL WARNING!!

This is a Guyanese board

Samjay?

 

Furhtermore its time for your medications, go drink your pressure, cholesterol and sugar tablets right now!!

GNI's panoramic view supersedes your myopic expectations.

FM

Alberta shooting: Guard wounded in mall heist opens eyes, squeezes wife’s hand


Matthew Schuman, the G4S guard who was critically injured at HUB Mall at the University of Alberta on June 15, 2012.

Photograph by: Courtesy CTV, edmontonjournal.com


EDMONTON - The guard critically wounded in last week’s shooting at the University of Alberta’s HUB Mall opened his eyes and squeezed his wife’s hand over the weekend.

 

Cpl. Matthew Schuman, a member of the Canadian Forces, was shot early Friday in a robbery that left three colleagues dead.

 

In a statement issued on Tuesday, Jennifer Schuman said her husband remains in critical but stable condition.

 

“We remain cautiously optimistic that his condition will improve,” she said.

 

Schuman said she was “relieved” to hear the alleged shooter had been captured and hopes “he co-operates and explains his actions, because he has affected so many lives.”

 

“His actions have angered an entire country, and I hope that at one point he can comprehend the level of damage he has done,” she said.

 

Schuman said she’s touched by the outpouring of public concern and extends her support to the other families affected by the shootings.

 

“I can’t begin to fathom the grief the families of the other victims must be experiencing,” she said. “My heart goes out to them and I hope that they have some small solace in knowing that the (alleged) attacker is behind bars.”

 

Family friend James Robson said that only family members have been allowed in the University of Alberta Hospital room to see Schuman, who was working his civilian job with G4S Cash Solutions at the time of the shooting.

 

Schuman’s age and the extent of his injuries have not been released.

 

Schuman enlisted in the Canadian Forces in 2009. He is a member of the Royal Canadian Air Force and is now posted at CFB Edmonton as a full-time military firefighter.

 

Meanwhile, the federal government confirmed Tuesday it will launch its own investigation into the triple homicide.

 

The case is being handled by the labour department, which is part of Human Resources and Skills Development Canada.

 

A spokesperson with Alberta Health and Safety said the case is under federal jurisdiction now because it was criminal in nature.

 

Travis Baumgartner has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder, one count of attempted murder, and four counts of armed robbery.

 

Police previously said Baumgartner was expected to be back in Edmonton on Wednesday, and would make his first court appearance in Edmonton.

 

A spokesperson for Alberta’s Solicitor General and Public Security would not confirm when or how Baumgartner will be returned to the province.

 

mgregory@edmontonjournal.com

twitter.com/mikedgregory

FM

Suspected Alberta shooter banned from contacting parents

Source

 

EDMONTON — An armoured car guard accused of gunning down three of his crewmates during a robbery at the University of Alberta has been forbidden to have any contact with a long list of people, including his parents.

 

Travis Baumgartner, 21, made his first court appearance in Edmonton on Thursday and was remanded in custody. His next court date is scheduled for July 5.

 

Most of the people on the no-contact list are expected to be witnesses, said chief Crown prosecutor Steve Bilodeau, who handled Baumgartner's brief court appearance personally.

 

"It's actually a pretty routine order with important witnesses," Bilodeau said outside court. "While he's in remand, he can't phone them or contact them in any way."

 

The order also includes several of Baumgartner's friends and co-workers, as well as any employee of G4S Canada, the security company that he was working for at the time of the robbery.

 

Police say Baumgartner was one of five armed guards who were loading a bank machine at the university's HUB mall and residence just after midnight June 15 when shots rang out.

 

Eddie Rejano, 39, Michelle Shegelski, 26, and Brian Ilesic, 35, died.

 

Matthew Schuman, a fourth guard who was badly wounded, opened his eyes last weekend and squeezed his wife's hand before he slipped back into unconsciousness. He remains in critical condition with what have been described as head injuries.

 

Baumgartner faces charges of first-degree murder, attempted murder and robbery with a firearm, but didn't enter a plea Thursday.

 

He wore the standard blue prison jumpsuit and was handcuffed. Security in the courtroom included four guards. The normal complement is two.

 

More than a dozen onlookers filed out of the courtroom after Baumgartner's brief appearance, but no friends or family appear to have been there.

 

Bilodeau said the Crown's office is aware of the attention the case has drawn and the impact it has made on the community.

 

"It's not that other homicides aren't important. It's that this one here rocked the community. It rocked the whole nation," Bilodeau said. "And this is one where I really want to make sure that the community knows we will take this as seriously as possible."

 

The day of the shooting, Baumgartner was first named by police as a person of interest, but that was upgraded to a suspect just a few hours later when they issued warrants for his arrest.

 

Baumgartner was picked up as he tried to get into Washington state Saturday at a border crossing just north of Lynden, Wash., near Abbotsford, B.C.

 

Police say he was driving the same dark-blue pickup truck investigators had been looking for with an Alberta licence plate belonging to his mother on the back.

 

He had no passport, just a driver's licence that police had flagged in their computers.

 

A backpack with $330,000 was found in the truck he was driving.

Rejano's funeral is Friday and Ilesic's is Saturday. The families have requested privacy.

 

Rejano's family released a statement Thursday thanking people for their "continued support and dedication."

 

"Without you we would be lost."

 

Travis Baumgartner is taken out of a van by Canadian Border Services officers at the Aldergrove, B.C. boarder crossing, on Saturday, June 16, 2012. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan)

FM

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