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Saskatoon

'Tyler was a survivor': Saskatoon homicide victim worked hard to leave gang lifestyle, friends say

Tyler Morin was working hard to leave behind the life of crime, drugs and gangs that had defined him, says one of his friends.

Tyler Morin was shot in the stomach Nov. 4 and died in hospital a week later

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Friends have identified Tyler Morin as Saskatoon's latest homicide victim. (Facebook)

Shooting victim Tyler Morin wasworking hard to leave behind the life of crime, drugs and gangs that had defined him, people who knew him say.

Morin has been identified by friends as the man who died earlier this week after being shot in the stomach on Nov. 4.

He isthe city's fifthhomicide victim of the year.

Friend Jorgina Sunnsays Morin was a survivor, someone who had left a gang with the help of Str8 Up, a local gang-interventionprogram in Saskatoon.

"Ultimately, Tyler was a survivor," Sunn said. "He determined he was to make those changes. Even if he faced the day-to-day struggles, he always showed up, he always came back."

'He was a struggling young man who wanted to do well,' says Andr Poilivre of Str8 Up, which helps people leaving gangs build a better life. (CBC News)

Str8 Up founder FatherAndrPoilivre said Morin had been a member of the program for about two years. A few weeks before he died, he did a presentation with other former gang members.

Poilivresaid Morin was a smart young man, who wanted more than the life of addiction and crime that had come to define so many people around him.

"He was a struggling young man who wanted to do well, who didn't want that lifestyle anymore and his whole family was involved in gangs, so he wanted to move on," he said.

Poilivresaid many of Morin's close family members were themselves gang members, but Morin had dropped out and was working hard to turn things around.

'Gang members are not bad people'

Sunn saidleaving gangs and the lifestyle is harder than people think. But Morin was a very respectful person who tried very hard to escape.

"His heart was always in the right place and that's how I choose to remember him," she said.

Poilivrerecalled that during a stint in jail a few years ago, Morin asked for a book on calculus.

"That's one indicator on what kind of guy he was. He liked to study, he liked to read," he said. "He looked forward to stuff. He wasn't just after gangs and garbage."

'Even if he faced the day-to-day struggles, he always showed up, he always came back,' says friend Jorgina Sunn, once a gang member in Alberta who is now helping others escape the street life in Saskatoon. (Rosalie Woloski/CBC News)

Poilivresaid "droppingcolours" is never easy, especially for people whoselives are entrenched in gangs. He said Morin had left his former gang butwas still fighting with his addiction, and was contemplating enrolling in a treatment program.

He was shot and killed before that ever happened. Poilivresaid he hopes sharing Morin's story will help people better understand the struggles gang members and former gang members go through.

"Gang members are not bad people. They do bad things, but they are just ordinary young men, young women whose lives have just been vicious and violent for them. They are born into that reality,"Poilivresaid.

"You have to admire the young man, not berate the young man."

Initially in 'stable condition'

Around 6 a.m. CST on Nov. 4, police responded to a 911 call of a man being shot at a residence in the 200 block of Avenue VS. They found the victim with a small-calibre gunshot wound to his abdomen.

Police said he was transported to the hospital instable condition, but earlier this week, confirmed that he had died on Nov. 11.

At the time of the shooting, police said they believed the victim knew the shooter but that a suspect had not been identified.

NeitherSunn orPoilivreknew any of the details surrounding the shooting, but they did say that Morin lived in the area where he was shot.