A 15-year-old Indigenous boy killed by RCMP in Wetaskiwin, Alta., last week handed a machete and a knife over to police and had run into a field before officers opened fire, Alberta’s policing watchdog said Thursday.

In a statement, the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team (ASIRT) provided new details on the final moments leading to the death of Hoss Lightning from Samson Cree Nation.

Lightning died last Friday. According to RCMP, the teen called 911 and told a dispatcher he was being followed by people trying to kill him.

  • StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website
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    4 months ago

    It was the old form. Other than BC, the old postal short forms were 3 or 4 letters.

    BC

    Alta

    Sask

    Man

    Ont

    Que

    NB

    NS

    PEI

    Nfld

    The 2-letter acronyms came up from the United States relatively recently.

      • StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website
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        4 months ago

        The two-letter system was already in place in the United States mail system before the 80s.

        It wouldn’t be the first time Canada adopted a US data standard to ease utilization of US made or standardized equipment.

          • StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website
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            4 months ago

            As someone who sees MS Word forms regularly force Canadians to use Month/Day/Year formats which were never native to Canada and don’t meet the ISO standard either, I am inferring the impetus transition.

            But truly, I old enough to recall many standards being harmonized in the early 90s in the wake of the North American free trade agreement.

            Whether or not a digital archive document demonstrates that Canada Post intentionally harmonized to match the US is TBC.

            But it is a verifiable fact that the two-letter standard for provinces and territories has not been commonly established in all federal regulations or data standards or in provincial and territorial data systems standards.

            That is to say, it has not been formally adopted as by Canada or as the ‘Canadian data standard.’