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Police watchdog investigating after man, 62, shot and killed by police in Mississauga | CBC News

Byindianadmin

Jun 21, 2020
Police watchdog investigating after man, 62, shot and killed by police in Mississauga | CBC News

Ontario’s police watchdog is investigating after a 62-year-old man died in a police-involved shooting in Mississauga on Saturday evening. 

Ejaz Ahmed Choudry, 62, was shot and killed by police in his apartment in Mississauga on Saturday night. His family says he suffered from schizophrenia and other illnesses. (Submitted by the Choudry family)

The province’s police watchdog is investigating the death of a 62-year-old man who was shot by a Peel Region police officer in Mississauga on Saturday evening. 

In a statement released on Sunday, the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) said that officers were called to an apartment unit at 3425 Morning Star Dr., near Goreway Drive, at about 5 p.m. to “check on the well-being of a man.”

Peel police Const. Sarah Patten said the initial call reported that the man was suffering from a medical condition and not taking his medication. 

Patten said the man, who was alone in the unit, was in a “state of crisis” and believed to have weapons on him in his residence.

Muhammed Choudry said the victim was his uncle and he suffered from schizophrenia and other illnesses.

“He was a harmless man,” he said, adding that his uncle was “not a threat.”

Muhammed Choudry says the victim was his uncle. “He was a harmless man,” he said. (Mark Bochsler/CBC)

Uniform and tactical officers, as well as officers with the force’s K9 unit, responded to the incident and communicated with the man, who had barricaded himself inside the residence.

Patten said officers were in constant communication with the man until just before 8 p.m., and then “no further communication was able to be made.”

“The state of crisis that he was in and the belief that he had access to weapons, yes, we believe that he was a danger to himself,” Patten told reporters Saturday night.

Due to his “extensive medical history” and lack of communication for almost 15 minutes, she said, officers made the decision to enter the residence “to check on his well-being.” 

The 62-year-old man barricaded himself inside his second-floor unit, where police believed

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