Const. James Forcillo claims he shot Sammy Yatim in two bursts of gunfire on an empty streetcar because the defiant 18-year-old tried to get up with a knife still in his hand.
The Toronto Sun obtained Forcillo’s statement of defence in an $8-million lawsuit launched by the deceased’s mother, Sahar Bahadi.
It says Forcillo and his partner responded to a radio call that a knife-wielding man attacked a woman on a westbound TTC streetcar near Dundas St. W. and Grace St. shortly before midnight on July 26, 2013.
Forcillo stopped his cruiser and blocked the stationary westbound streetcar.
He spotted Yatim “holding a switchblade ... with a narrow blade approximately five inches long, held upright in the air” at the top of the streetcar’s stairs, the document says.
The officer claims he wanted to apprehend Yatim on the empty streetcar, where he posed less of a threat.
Forcillo “perceived himself to be in a vulnerable position with little time to react given the short distance between them,” the document says.
“With his service firearm pointed at the suspect, Forcillo ordered Yatim to drop the knife. He appeared to be physically in control of himself and to hear and understand the police commands.”
Yatim showed no signs of co-operating and instead “responded several times in an aggressive and defiant manner,” the document says.
The statement of claim says Yatim appeared to be “emotionally disturbed,” but Forcillo alleges the cause of Yatim’s behaviour wasn’t apparent.
He called for a Taser and warned Yatim to freeze. Yatim “paused, remained stationary for several seconds,” the statement of defence says, then suddenly “moved in a deliberate motion towards the open front streetcar door with his knife held out.”
Forcillo claims he shot Yatim to protect himself and others.
Yatim collapsed, the document says, “then began raising himself, looking at Forcillo and continuing to hold the knife upright” despite the officer’s orders to drop it.
That’s when he shot at Yatim again, the document says.
Forcillo’s statement disputes Yatim’s “emotional illness” triggered his bizarre behaviour.
None of the allegations in the statements of claim and defence have been proven in court.
“This is, in the broadest terms, his response to the civil case, but it certainly doesn’t include all of the details of the incident, which will most certainly be revealed in the criminal trial,” Forcillo’s criminal lawyer, Peter Brauti, said.
Forcillo’s second-degree murder trial is expected to begin in October.
http://www.torontosun.com/2015/09/18/yatim-shooting-forcillos-side-of-the-story