The casket of South Simcoe Police Service constable Morgan Russell is carried into a joint funeral service in Barrie, Ont., on Oct. 20.Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press
A funeral service has begun in Barrie, Ont., for two police officers who died after a shooting last week.
Constable Morgan Russell, 54, and Constable Devon Northrup, 33, of the South Simcoe Police Service died after responding to a call about a disturbance at a home in Innisfil, Ont., north of Toronto, on Oct. 11.
Caskets for the two men were carried to the front of Sadlon Arena in Barrie shortly before 11:30 a.m. as thousands of uniformed police and emergency responders from across the province joined the officers’ families for the joint service.
Bagpipes played as pallbearers carried the caskets to the front of the room, where flowers and portraits of Russell and Northrup were on display. Folded Canadian flags and police caps were placed on top of the caskets.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford walks past the casket of Russell.Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press
The gathered mourners stood and saluted for a performance of O Canada that opened the service, followed by a moment of silence.
Earlier in the morning, uniformed officers had lined the streets outside the arena to salute the funeral cortège as it passed. Community members also gathered at the side of the road to watch and pay respects.
Police members from Toronto, South Simcoe, York Region and Barrie police services, along with hundreds of RCMP and other police force members joined the procession that began after 9 a.m. on a road leading to the arena.
The procession moved through snowy Barrie streets, with paramedics and other emergency responders participating, as solemn music with bagpipes and drums filled the air during the march.
South Simcoe Police Service officers, led by Acting Chief John Van Dyke, take part in the funeral procession for two South Simcoe police officers outside the Sadlon Arena in Barrie.
RCMP officers arrive at the funeral procession.
A multi-force motorcade leads the two hearses.Christopher Drost/The Canadian Press
Once the service began, a group of Innisfil residents gathered at the main worship room at the Innisfil Community Church to watch a broadcast of the funeral on a large screen. A group of about 60 people also gathered to watch the service in person on a large screen at the Innisfil Community Church.
People were also invited to watch the service at the St. John’s Presbyterian Church in Bradford, Ont.
The Special Investigations Unit, which is investigating the shooting, has said the two officers who died did not draw their firearms before they were shot by a 22-year-old man at the home. The young man also died after an exchange of gunfire with a third officer who was not injured, the SIU said.
Constable Russell, a 33-year veteran of the force, was a trained crisis negotiator, while Northrup was a six-year member who worked with the community mobilization and engagement unit and served as a member of the mental-health crisis outreach team. Both officers died in hospital after the shooting.
The casket of Northrup is carried.Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press
The two deaths mark three officers shot dead in Ontario in a month after the fatal shooting of Toronto Constable Andrew Hong in Mississauga, Ont., in mid-September.
The funeral comes two days after RCMP officer Constable Shaelyn Yang was fatally stabbed in Burnaby, B.C., during an altercation at a homeless campsite. Constable Yang was a mental health and homeless outreach officer.
Interim Toronto police chief James Ramer told a local television station that it was important to be in Barrie for the funeral as police officers across the country grieve together.
“It’s sad … I don’t know how else to describe it,” he said. “This is one big team.”