Kingston care hub shuts as police name victims, accused in fatal attack

Two heart-shaped balloons and a bouquet of flowers on a fence around a closed building in summer.
Balloons and flowers are seen Friday outside a temporary fence erected around the Integrated Care Hub in Kingston, Ont. The health centre has been temporarily closed since an attack on Thursday that left two people dead and a third critically injured. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

On Friday morning, Kingston Police cruisers sat parked outside the city’s Integrated Care Hub (ICH) and a tall fence that was erected overnight surrounded the site, lined with tents and other temporary shelters.

It was a very different scene than the previous morning when the area was wrapped in yellow police tape and paramedics stood by as police officers engaged in a roughly six-hour standoff with the suspect in a deadly assault.

Two people were killed and a third remains in hospital with life-threatening injuries after a series of attacks Thursday morning that investigators say unfolded in an encampment near the Montreal Street facility.

Witnesses said the male suspect attacked two men and a woman using what appeared to be a hammer.

Just before 5 p.m., the suspect was taken into custody without further incident, according to police.

On Friday, police said 47-year-old Andre Wareham of Kingston has been charged with two counts of second-degree murder and one count of attempted murder. He remains in custody after a bail hearing, police said.

On Friday, a spokesperson told CBC the accused lives near the scene.

Police said the two people he’s accused of killing are 38-year-old Taylor Wilkinson and 41-year-old John Hood, both from Kingston. They aren’t naming the person in hospital.

Mayor calls for closure, resources

In a statement issued Thursday, the ICH said it had been asked to temporarily close while police continue to investigate what happened.

“This closure will be effective immediately and is expected to last a couple of days,” it read.

Even before the suspect was arrested, Kingston Mayor Bryan Paterson issued a statement of his own saying he was “absolutely horrified” by the attacks.

He called for the encampment to be cleared and for both ICH and the supervised injection site it houses to shut down.

“We as a city have been talking about the dangers of this encampment in and around the supervised injection site for almost three years,” the mayor wrote.

“I will not stand by and wait until more people die — enough is enough.”

A group of paramedics stand in the foreground. Down the street is a circle of police officers surrounded by caution tape and cruisers.
Emergency crews are seen outside Kingston’s Integrated Care Hub on Thursday following a series of attacks that left two people dead and a third with life-threatening injuries. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

In an interview on Friday, Paterson said he’d like to work with community partners to continue providing necessary health services while ensuring public safety.

He offered few specifics, but mentioned more treatment and housing resources.

“We have an immediate closure because it’s a crime scene. What I’d like to see is the closure of what has occurred so we can have something else,” he said. “That call for closure is really to say we have to turn the page.”

WATCH | Kingston mayor calls for changes after homicides:

‘Enough is enough’: Kingston mayor calls for closure of care hub after fatal attack

Kingston Mayor Bryan Paterson is calling for the city’s Integrated Care Hub to be closed, saying Thursday’s attack was “the final straw.” Jay English, who lived in the nearby encampment, says displacing residents isn’t the answer.

The encampment has long been controversial in Kingston, with officials pushing to have it cleared and even seeking a court order to do so. 

A judge ruled the city’s ban on overnight sheltering was unconstitutional. However, he included an exception allowing people who are homeless to erect shelters in parks, but only overnight.

Attempts to enforce that rule were met with protests and blockades in April, and the encampment remained.

Suspect wasn’t ‘a regular,’ says witness

Jay English said he’s lived in the encampment for more than two years and witnessed the attacks on Thursday.

“The guy that did it, he’s not a regular, a regular person that stays here,” he said. “We’re all hurt. Really, really hurt.”

English said he believes clearing the encampment is unnecessary, adding it will only force those who had been staying in there onto city streets and away from the supports they need.

“It’s a bad enough day. We lost two of our best friends, and another one of our friends is the one who did it,” he said.

“Now to lose our homes and have to go somewhere where we’re not going to feel as comfortable as we all do here…. It’s going to take its toll.”

A man in a Blue Jays ball cap and sunglasses stares at the camera. City workers can be seen setting up pylons behind him.
Jay English said he’s lived in the encampment near the ICH for more than two years and witnessed the attacks. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

Advocates have also spoken out, sharing both their grief over the attacks and their frustration at the mayor’s comments.

John Done, one of the lawyers who represented encampment residents during the court case, described Paterson’s words as “premature and misguided.”

Done noted police are continuing to investigate, adding at this point there’s no indication the ICH or supervised injection site played a role in what happened.

“Without the safe injection site, the Integrated Care Hub and the homeless encampment, what would we have left?” Done wrote in a statement. 

“A higher frequency of overdoses, fewer shelter beds, and more homelessness. Hardly the conditions to reduce
crime and violence.”