Here’s what we know so far about the timeline of what happened.
Tumbler Ridge RCMP received and responded to a report of an active shooter at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School on Southgate St. at 2:20 p.m. Mountain Standard Time (4:20 p.m. EST), according to RCMP Deputy Commissioner Dwayne McDonald. He did not say how many officers attended the initial call.“Our officers arrived on scene and immediately went into the school. As you can imagine, it was chaotic,” McDonald told reporters in a Feb. 13 press conference. “The fire alarms were going off. There was somebody that either leaned out or shouted out a window to our officers: ‘The suspect is upstairs. He’s upstairs.’”
McDonald said officers went to the stairwell and faced gunfire on the way to the library.
“It was a matter of seconds after that, there was more gunfire, not as we know now, having reviewed video, directed at any persons. And then ultimately, a suspect took their life.”
“I can say with confidence that from the moment the suspect encountered police, there were no further injuries to any other students in the school,” McDonald added.
Student Accounts
Seventeen-year-old Tumbler Ridge student Darian Quist said the shooting began shortly after the start of his mechanics class, according to Radio West. He said he heard the school’s alarm start sounding and then saw news online that a shooting had been reported, prompting him and the other students to barricade the door of the mechanics shop.“It was definitely tense. I think we were all very nervous … trying to keep each other motivated and not fall into grief. But once people sent me some photos, at that point it set in what was actually happening,” Darien said, adding that he and others waited approximately two hours before RCMP came to evacuate them from the school.

Aiding the Injured
In addition to the deceased students, teacher, and shooter, police also located 27 individuals who had been injured in the attack, two of whom were airlifted for emergency surgery in Vancouver. The two have since been identified as Maya Gebala, 12, who is in critical condition, and Paige Hoekstra, 19, who is reportedly recovering from surgery.The school grounds are in the southern end of town, less than a kilometre from the elementary school and the health centre where the injured were taken.

Maya’s mother, Cia Edmonds, said she saw two armed officers run into the school building at the start of the response, according to CBC. She then joined parents in the parking lot of the recreation centre, where another parent showed her a text message he had received from his child in the school.
The text said the student was fine but when Edmonds asked him to inquire how Maya was, the student replied to his father that “Maya’s been dragged out, and I believe she’s been shot.”
“She tried to lock it and then ran under a table and he shot her,” Hunt said, adding that Maya probably wouldn’t have survived had her friend not noticed her finger twitching, recognized that she was still alive, and alerted the authorities.
Edmonds said she heard students rushed to help her daughter after the rounds struck her teacher and then hit her in the head.
Maya was taken to the health centre in town, where Edmonds saw staff cutting away her clothing in an attempt to save her. She was subsequently airlifted to B.C. Children’s Hospital in Vancouver.
Second Crime Scene
Investigators were made aware of a second crime scene at a residence on Fellers Avenue at 2:47 p.m. It is located roughly two kilometres away from the high school. McDonald did not specify the time taken to respond to this second crime scene, but noted that two deceased victims were found at the location.These individuals have since been identified as Van Rootselaar’s mother, 39-year-old Jennifer Jacobs, and 11-year-old step-brother, Emmett Jacobs. McDonald said police believe they were killed by Van Rootselaar before the suspect left for the high school.

At the time, police noted they were investigating whether a second suspect was involved, but later ruled out that possibility. McDonald said during a Feb. 11 press conference that Van Rootselaar was born a biological male but began a gender transition process roughly six years ago.
RCMP lifted the emergency alert at 6:45 p.m. and said there was no longer a threat to the public. Police put out a statement by 7 p.m. saying eight individuals had been found dead at the school and two dead at the residence connected to the suspect. Police corrected this assessment a day later, saying they initially thought one of the individuals airlifted to hospital had also died.
RCMP Superintendent Ken Floyd addressed the media at 7:45 p.m. He said police did not yet know the motives of the shooter and confirmed the suspect mentioned in the alert was the same individual who had been found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound at the school.







