The Current

We want to hear from you: How has gun violence affected you and your community?

One Bullet is a CBC investigation into the impact of gun violence in our country, one bullet, one person at a time.

CBC's One Bullet examines the impact of gun violence in our country

Audette Shephard pleaded for winesses to come forward after the killing of her son Justin Shephard in 2001.

Justin Shephard told his mother he'd be "back in 10 minutes" before heading out into the hot summer night. It would be the last time Audette Shephard would see her son alive.

Justin Shephard, 19, was gunned down near his Toronto home in 2001.

"If you have any kind of conscience, come forward," Audette Shephard pleaded at the time for witnesses.

"If you have any kind of love in your heart, just think about your mother, if you'd like to see your mother go through something like this."

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Nearly two decades later, Justin Shephard's killing remains unsolved and is one of roughly 600 cold homicide cases on file with Toronto police.

Across Canada, numbers tracking guns and violent death are heading in the wrong direction.

Violent firearm crime continued to uptick for the third year in a row in 2017, up seven per cent to 2,734 offences, according to Statistics Canada — though that included everything from shooting a gun "with intent" to pointing one at someone to having a gun on you while committing another offence.

Waiting for a witness

6 years ago
Duration 0:42
One Bullet: Impact of gun violence in our country, one bullet, one person at a time.

Justin Shephard's story is part of CBC's One Bullet, an investigation into the impact of gun violence in our country, one bullet, one person at a time. Each instalment takes a close look at a shooting from somewhere in Canada — who was hurt or killed; who was held accountable; and how did the fallout impact friends, family and first responders.

Our special coverage starts on Sunday, Jan. 13, online with Justin Shephard's story and throughout the week on The Current.