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British Columbia

Brothers, motivated by 'anti-authority beliefs,' staged Saanich bank robbery in effort to kill police: RCMP

Police said Mathew and IsaacAuchterlonie, both 22, had a goal to get into ashootoutwith police when they went into the Bank of Montreal branch in Saanich, B.C., last June.

Police say brothers used robbery to draw out officers; violence planned since 2019

B.C. bank robbery suspects acted alone, motivated by 'anti-authority beliefs'

2 years ago
Duration 0:45
Sanjaya Wijayakoon of the BC RCMP Major Crime Program confirmed in a press conference Friday the two B.C. bank robbery suspects acted alone.

Warning: This story contains details of violence.

THE LATEST:

  • RCMP say suspects' goal was to shoot and kill as many police officers as possible.
  • BrothersMathew and IsaacAuchterlonie, both 22, used the bank robbery to draw out police and did not intend to steal money or harm the public.
  • Suspects were motivated by "anti-government" and "anti-police" views.
  • RCMP investigation ruled out third suspect, despite initial fears another person was involved.
  • Brothers had been planning violence since 2019 and spent a "significant" amount of their money acquiring firearms.

Police say two suspects shot dead by police in a gunfight outside a bank in Saanich, B.C., last year went to the branch with the intent to hurt or kill as many officers as possible, having planned anattack for several years.

Aninvestigation detailedfor the first time Friday found brothers Mathew and IsaacAuchterlonie, both 22, wanted a shootout with police not money when they went into a local Bank of Montreal branch around midday on June 28.

The men were heavily armed with semi-automatic rifles, body armour andimprovised explosive devices, or IEDs, in the trunk of the white car they used to circle the bank before parking and going inside at 11:02 a.m. PT.

The brothersheld 22 people inside the bankto attract police. They walkedout to the parking lot 16 minutes later.

Six specialized police officers were shot in the ensuing gunfight. Thesuspects were killed.

"It was determined the suspects' primary objective was to shoot and kill police officers in what they saw as a stand against government regulations, especially in relation to firearms ownership," saidRCMP Cpl. Alex Brubof the Vancouver Island Integrated Major Crime Unit.

The RCMP news conference on Friday provided the clearest picture to date around the brothers' motive for the crimeand their movement in the hours leading up to the shooting. An investigation from B.C.'s police watchdog in December focused on the interaction between the suspects and police, clearing the officers of any wrongdoing in the face of "unbridled violence."

WATCH |B.C. bank robbery suspects acted alone, motivated by 'anti-authority beliefs':

B.C. bank robbery suspects' goal was to harm police officers, not steal money: RCMP

2 years ago
Duration 0:44
At a press conference Friday, Cpl. Alex Berube of the BC RCMP confirmed brothers Mathew and Isaac Auchterlonie's 'primary objective was to shoot and kill police officers.'

The officers who were shot are members of theGreater Victoria Emergency Response Team (GVERT), specially trained to respond and deal with dangerous and high-risk incidents in the area. Three are from the Saanich Police Department and three were members of Victoria Police.

Four of those officers are back at work two from each department. The two remaining GVERT officers, one from Saanich and one from Victoria,have not been able to return.

Both departments notedseveral additional staff, including three police officers from Saanich, are also off work due topsychological trauma.

"As we all know, there were significant ... injuries that were suffered on that day," said Saanich Police Chief Const. Dean Duthie.

Police officers gather after two armed men entering a bank were killed in a shootout with police in Saanich, B.C., on June 28, 2022. (Kevin Light/Reuters)

On Friday, RCMP saidinvestigators concluded theAuchterlonieshad strong "anti-government" and "anti-police views" based on searches oftheir belongings including their phones and their bedroomsat their mother's home.

Mounties saidneither brother had a criminal record and the SKS semi-automatic rifles used in the shooting were legal weapons, though they were using prohibited magazines and one gun had been illegally altered to remove the serial number.

The suspects each had a valid Possession and Acquisition Licence forfirearms.

The brothers had been planning the event since at least 2019, officersadded. A "larger attack" had been planned for 2023, but investigators believe the suspects sped up thetimeline because they were moving.

"The suspects concluded that they could not move their arsenal of weapons to a new location without attracting attention and thus selectedthe bank location at random," said Brub.

The bank is in a largely residential neighbourhood of Saanich, about a kilometre west of the University of Victoria campus on southern Vancouver Island. The plaza was full of people running errands at nearby shops or stopping at restaurants for lunch when the shooting began around midday on a Tuesday.

RCMP said there was no evidence the suspectswanted to hurt civilians.

Investigators initially feared there was a third suspect involved in the shooting based on several factors includingimmediate witness accounts, information from hostages and atwo-way walkie-talkie found with the suspects. Some people unrelated to the crime were also seen wearing camouflage in the community after the incident, rattling first responders already on high alert.

On Friday, RCMP said they ruled out the possibility of a third suspect after speaking with witnesses and canvassing the area. Some witnesses, investigators said, citing an example, had confused GVERT first responders in the unmarked van as suspects.

Investigators lay out suspects' timeline

Using cellphone data and various videos of the brothers' Toyota Camry, Mounties pieced together a timeline of the suspects' movement before they got to the bank that Tuesday.

Investigators said the Auchterlonies werein the Mill Bay area, north of Saanich, and headed to the Victoria area around 8:26 a.m. PT.

Their car was seen 27 times on surveillance video in the area of the BMO branchbetween 9:22 and 9:54 a.m. PT, including several instances where the suspects circled the bank and drovein and out of the parking lot.

RCMP believe the brothers chose the bank at random.

Click on locations above to get details of the suspects' movements.

The suspects went intothe branchat 11:02 a.m. Officers from the GVERTand Saanich Police Departmentresponded to 911 calls shortly after.

The brotherswalked out intothe parking lot as an unmarked van carrying seven police officerspulled in all members of the emergency response team, who had already been nearby on another call.

The Independent Investigation Office of B.C.'s report in December found one of the brothers turned to face the van and raised his rifle.

An officer opened a sliding door and threw out aflashbang device to try and distract the two men, butgunfire broke out almost immediately.

Several officers were shot.

Watch | Saanich police chief thanks community for support:

Saanich police chief thanks community for support

2 years ago
Duration 1:42
Chief Constable Dean Duthie of Saanich Police Department thanked his members and community partners for their support during this time.

The team's medic and driverboth fired pistols attheAuchterloniesas otherofficers tended to their injured colleagues. Other responding officersran toward the scene andopened fire.

According to the IIO report, one of the brothers wasshot in the head as he tried to move across the parking lot. The other was hit several times while he shot at the van, later trying to crawl toward his brother.

Autopsies showed one brother was hit by three police bullets and the other was struck by nine.

After the brotherswere shot and killed, police found a large cache of guns, ammunition and 30 homemade explosive devices in their car that was parked near the bank.

RCMP said therifles used in the shooting were ofRussian origin and dated back to the 1950s, but could not be traced.

With files from Bethany Lindsay and Karin Larsen