Ottawa·The Fifth Estate

Young man dies after falling 12 storeys during Ottawa police raid

Home video captures heavily armed Ottawa police officers raiding a 12th-floor apartment on Wednesday morning. Moments later, a young man falls 12 storeys to his death. The parents of 23-year-old Anthony Aust piece together what happened in an exclusive interview with CBC's The Fifth Estate.

Family feels grief and anger over controversial no-knock search as SIU investigates

Anthony Aust, 23, of Ottawa fell to his death on Wednesday morning from a window of his family's highrise apartment building after heavily armed SWAT team officers entered the unit. His stepfather, grandmother and two younger siblings were home at the time. (Submitted by Raymond Aust)

The home video captures the moment when heavily armed police officers barge into a 12th-floor apartment in Ottawa on Wednesday. It is just before 9 a.m., and the television is on when the relative quiet of the morning is violently interrupted.

The front door is forced open with a battering ram, then an officer yells "Police, don't move!" twice, before throwing a stun grenade. As smoke fills the room, at least eight tactical officers fan across the apartment with their semi-automatic rifles pointed in search of their suspect. 

Inside one of the bedrooms, they found a 12-year-old boy roused from his sleep, but their target wasn't there, the family said. The window screen beside the bunk bed had been pushed open and police could see the body of 23-year-old Anthony Aust on the grass below.

Ben Poirier, Anthony's stepfather, told CBC's The Fifth Estate that he was on the balcony having a coffee and a cigarette when police crashed through the door — a door, Poirier said, that wasn't even locked. All police had to do was knock, he said.

Instead, "the place looked like a war zone," he said.

Poirier said the SWAT officers pushed him to the floor and handcuffed him with his arms behind his back. The 68-year-old said he has had three strokes and started to feel chest pains. He said the officers didn't believe him until they saw his body slump.

Ben Poirier mourns the loss of his stepson, Anthony Aust, on Wednesday. The young man fell 12 storeys to his death following a police raid at their Ottawa apartment. Poirier, 68, says he was thrown to the floor and handcuffed. (Francis Ferland/ CBC)

"I could have died," Poirier said.

As police removed the handcuffs, Poirier started calling for his children. What he didn't know was that his oldest stepson had jumped out the window, falling 12 storeys to his death.

'In my heart and mind, he was still alive'

At around the same time, Nhora Aust, 50 who works as a driver for special education students, was frantically trying to get home. Her son's probation office had just called to inform her that Anthony's GPS ankle monitor had set off an alarm. He was in breach of his bail conditions because he wasn't in the apartment, nor was he with his sureties.

When Aust returned home to 2020 Jasmine Cres., in the Ottawa suburb of Gloucester, she saw that the parking lot was teeming with police and paramedics. Anthony's body lay under a yellow tarp near the side entrance of the apartment tower. She told CBC that she went into shock.

"In my heart and mind, he was still alive. I just need to touch him. I just need to touch him. I just need to give him a kiss," Aust sobbed, as she recounted how she pleaded with police to let her see her oldest son. She only saw the aftermath of the raid but was the person who had to tell her family that Anthony was dead.

WATCH | Black man falls to death after Ottawa police conduct no-knock raid:

Black man falls to death after Ottawa police carry out no-knock raid

4 years ago
Duration 2:06
The family of a Black Ottawa man who fell to his death on Wednesday after police burst into his family's apartment with no warning to carry out a search warrant speaks out. A judge had criticized Ottawa police's overuse of this no-knock method.

Anthony had moved into his mother's three-bedroom apartment in March. He was released from jail at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic after getting bail. He was facing 11 charges after allegedly being caught with drugs and a gun during a traffic stop in January.

As part of his bail plan, Anthony could only leave the apartment with either his mother, father or uncle, who were his sureties. His family was worried about his mental health and that he was falling into a depression.

Aust said she believes her son jumped because he didn't want to return to jail.

"He was terrified of his peers, terrified of the police and terrified of jail. That was my son. He didn't have time to live. He didn't have time to know life. He was a kid."

As part of the bail arrangement, Aust said she provided the Crown and police with a list of the people who live with her. It includes her 94-year-old mother, 12-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter, along with her second husband, Ben.

They were all inside the apartment during the raid, along with Anthony's girlfriend.

WATCH | Mother says son 'didn't have time to live':

Mother of man who fell to death during police raid says he 'didn’t have time to live'

4 years ago
Duration 1:12
Nhora Aust says her son, who fell to his death from a bedroom window during a police raid, was just a kid robbed of a chance to get to know life.

Aust said police told her they were looking for a gun and cocaine. She wasn't told if they found anything.

"What judge would sign a [no-knock] warrant under those conditions, knowing all those people in the house?" asked Aust. "There is no justice. I'm not going to get my son back. They have to stop doing this. I'm lucky my husband is alive.... I'm lucky my [other] children are alive."

Aust said she isn't confident that Ontario's police watchdog will lay charges in her son's death. The Special Investigations Unit (SIU) has assigned four investigators to the probe, which will take months to complete.

On Thursday, the SIU said in a statement that two police officers have been designated as witness officers, and "designation of the subject officer(s) is pending." One civilian witness has been interviewed, the statement said, adding that an autopsy was performed on Thursday.

In a tweet on Wednesday, Ottawa police stated that it has "invoked its mandate in relation to a police investigation" into the incident. "Any further information will come from SIU."

Only five per cent of SIU cases result in charges, the agency said in 2019.

No-knock searches 'bread and butter' for police

Canadian police forces refer to no-knock warrants as "dynamic entries." Before he retired in 2018, Jeff Kilcollins was a duty inspector on the Ottawa police force and was on the SWAT team for two decades. He called dynamic entries the "bread and butter" of tactical officers because of how common they are.

"We conduct hundreds of them a year in Ontario," he said.

Kilcollins said most no-knock warrants are issued when there is a concern that suspects will try to destroy evidence if police don't act quickly and with surprise.

Jeff Kilcollins, who spent two decades on the Ottawa police tactical unit, says most no-knock warrants are issued when there is a concern that suspects will try to destroy evidence if police don't act quickly and with surprise. Hundreds of such raids are conducted every year in the city. (Submitted by Jeff Kilcollins)

 "There are demands from the court system, the judicial system. They like it much better when the accused is in possession of the evidence. Narcotics are generally considered disposable evidence, much like child pornography," Kilcollins said. 

Raymond Aust, 20, Anthony's brother, said Ottawa police should have known that a no-knock raid in a highrise building could be dangerous.

"I was mad. Whatever they were trying to do, it was wrong. There was no justification in the whole situation. There's way too many officers. It's a 12th-floor apartment. There's no due diligence there."

When he saw the raid on the home security video, Raymond, a student at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., downloaded the video to his phone and sent it out to reporters.

"I knew I had to get this story out. There's most likely countless other stories of this happening that are unreported and way more abuses of power," he said.

Poirier, left, and Raymond Aust stare at the bedroom window through which Anthony Aust, Raymond's brother, fell to his death on Wednesday. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

Raymond said that growing up, his older brother was his protector and always supported him. He said he wants police to start viewing young men of colour as humans, not threats.

"Another black man died today.... If they're truly working for the public, this wouldn't have happened. They treated him like he wasn't a human, but everyone makes mistakes and that's the point of being human," Raymond said.

"You have to learn from your mistakes. He didn't get the chance."

Court backs no-knock warrants in urgent cases

In 2010, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that such no-knock warrants could be used in urgent cases. But in February of this year, an Ottawa judge ruled that one woman's charter rights were violated by police in a dynamic entry. Superior Court Justice Sally Gomery said that "police cannot operate from an assumption that they should break in the door of any residence that they have a warrant to search."

"The misconduct was serious because it was based on a casual disregard for established authority about how search warrants should be executed," Gomery ruled.

Veteran defence lawyer Mark Ertel won that February case before Gomery.

Ottawa defence lawyer Mark Ertel successfully argued in a case in February that a no-knock 'dynamic entry' by Ottawa police violated his client's charter rights. Ertel says the ruling doesn't appear to have decreased the number of police raids in the city. (Francis Ferland/ CBC)

He said search warrants are often granted based on intelligence from unsavoury characters who may not be telling the truth.

"It's usually informant evidence — information from people who are paid to provide information to police or will have charges withdrawn if they provide information to police. These are people with criminal records and a lot to be gained by providing information."

Ertel said the ruling doesn't appear to have curbed the use of surprise raids by the Ottawa police. But the death of Anthony Aust could be a turning point.

"The tradeoff for not losing a little bit of drugs because it could be flushed down the toilet and endangering people's lives is not a tradeoff the courts would condone."

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians — from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community — check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said the Supreme Court ruling on no-knock warrants occurred in 2013. In fact, the judgement was rendered in 2010.
    Oct 12, 2020 11:57 AM ET

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Judy Trinh

CBC Reporter

Judy Trinh is an investigative journalist with CBC News. She covers a diverse range of stories from police misconduct to human rights court challenges and the #MeToo movement. She aims to be both critical and compassionate in her reporting. Follow her on Twitter @judyatrinh Reach her at judy.trinh@cbc.ca

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