
‘Hurry please’: Inquest told 92 emergency calls made during Saskatchewan rampage
MELFORT, Sask. — Family members hugged and wept at a coroner’s inquest after learning how a man went from home to home, kicking in doors and stabbing people on a Saskatchewan First Nation.
The initial calls to 911 played Tuesday at the inquest show the increasing fear of community members as Myles Sanderson, armed with a knife, terrorized people on the James Smith Cree Nation on Sept. 4, 2022.
“Hurry please. I’m bleeding,” Brandon Genereaux said in a call to a 911 operator after he was attacked.
Genereaux would survive the violent rampage but his father, Robert Sanderson, was among the 11 people killed on the First Nation and in the nearby village of Weldon