The W. R. Myers High School shooting was a school shooting that occurred on April 28, 1999, at W. R. Myers High School in Taber, Alberta, Canada. The gunman, 14-year-old Todd Cameron Smith, walked into his school and began firing at three students in a hallway, killing one student and wounding another student.[1] This shooting took place only eight days after the Columbine High School Massacre in Littleton, Colorado, and is widely believed to have been a copycat crime.[2] It was the first fatal high-school shooting in Canada in more than two decades.
The incident began when Smith entered the school campus armed with a registered sawed off .22-calibre rifle and hundreds of rounds of ammunition. As lunch concluded, he fired at three students in a hallway adjacent to the cafeteria. He fatally shot 17-year-old Jason Lang at point-blank range, and then shot at two other students, seriously wounding one, and missing the other.[3] Gym coach Cheyno Finnie managed to wrestle Smith to the floor. He was arrested without further incident by a Taber constable, who also served as the school's resource officer.[3] He was charged with one count of first-degree murder, and two counts of attempted murder.[4]
Smith's identity and background was originally protected under Canada's Young Offenders Act at the time of his arrest.[5][6] He had recently dropped out of W.R. Myers High School earlier in the school year. According to court documents, he had suffered severe bullying at school, including having being doused with lighter fluid and threatened to be set alight when he was in the first grade.[2] He was remembered as being intelligent but socially awkward, and had become "reclusive and extremely fearful"[2] by early adolescence. His mother said he had been showing signs of depression throughout his childhood.[6] Smith's family stated that he "snapped" after watching coverage of the Columbine massacre, which had occurred eight days prior.[2]
Crown prosecutors attempted to have then 15-year-old Smith tried as an adult with the potential for a life sentence with the possibility of parole in five years. The Crown also argued that an adult prison would offer greater educational programs than a youth facility could provide. The court denied the motion and he was tried as a juvenile.[2]
Following his arrest and prior to trial, a medical examination discovered Smith had a heart ailment that required open heart surgery. During the surgery, he suffered a stroke and fell into a coma. After awakening from the coma, he had speaking and eating difficulties and suffered from diminished mental capacity. His case was suspended until he recovered, as both the Crown and defense agreed he was unable to stand trial.[7] Following a "remarkable recovery", he was declared suitable to stand trial, and was scheduled to appear in court in September 2000.[8] At his trial, Smith pleaded guilty to all three charges, and was sentenced to three years in prison, and was ordered to live seven years on probation upon his release.[2]
Shortly after the shooting, Reverend Dale Lang, father of victim Jason Lang, immediately forgave his son's killer.[6] Dale Lang preaches the need for compassion and forgiveness, and has become a well-known public speaker and anti-bullying activist.[9]
In March 2005, Todd Cameron Smith was released into a halfway house in Toronto, despite the agreement of the judge that the then 20-year-old remained a threat to society. In August of that year, he walked outside of the halfway house, leaving behind a note stating, "he wouldn't be caged any longer and he wouldn't surrender alive."[10] His escape prompted Toronto police to obtain a court injunction allowing them to publicize his identity until such time as he was caught.[11][12][13] However, Smith turned himself in to authorities the following day and was recaptured without incident. The waiver allowing publication of his identity in Canada lapsed upon his recapture, though not before his name was published or released by several news outlets across the country. Following his recapture, Canadian media were required to no longer use Smith's name or photograph, as they had the previous day.