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Officers involved in fatal shooting of Hamilton man used reasonable force: SIU

Two Hamilton officers involved in the fatal shooting of a man in an apartment building last year used reasonable force in the face of what they believed was an imminent threat of serious harm or death, Ontario's police watchdog said Friday.
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Erixon Kabera is shown in a handout photo. Kabera was fatally shot in an apartment building by Hamilton, Ont. police on Nov. 10, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO

Two Hamilton officers involved in the fatal shooting of a man in an apartment building last year used reasonable force in the face of what they believed was an imminent threat of serious harm or death, Ontario's police watchdog said Friday.

The director of the Special Investigations Unit, Joseph Martino, said he determined there are no reasonable grounds to believe the officers who opened fire on a 43-year-old man on Nov. 9 committed a criminal offence.

The man's family has identified him as Erixon Kabera, a father of three who they said dedicated his life to his family and community.

In a statement released through their lawyers Friday, Kabera's relatives said they are "disappointed" with the findings of the SIU investigation and considering their legal options.

"Erixon was loved by many and is deeply missed by his family, friends, and his community both in Canada and in Rwanda," the statement said.

Hamilton police, meanwhile, said they recognize "the profound impact this incident has had on Erixon’s family, the broader community and our members."

The force "remains committed to meeting with Erixon’s family and Rwandan community leaders to find a path forward whenever the community is ready," it said in a statement.

When it initially announced its investigation last year, the SIU said Hamilton police were responding to reports of a man "acting in a threatening manner" and there was an "exchange of gunfire" with police.

The agency later said it did not appear the man had discharged a firearm before he was shot.

In a report released Friday, the SIU said the man was holding a replica handgun and raised it in the direction of the officers as he walked towards them in the building's hallway, causing one of the officers to fire as many as eight rounds.

The report says the man continued to walk toward the officers, and the other officer fired six to eight shots. Both officers lost their footing as they walked backward and stumbled to the ground, the SIU says.

The officer who first opened fire lost her gun as she fell and used a stun gun, and moments later, the other officer fired another seven or eight shots, it says.

The man collapsed and later died in hospital. An autopsy found he died from multiple gunshot wounds, the report says.

Martino said the officers "honestly believed they were looking at an actual gun" and "their misapprehension was a reasonable one."

It looked like a gun, the man held it like a gun and a neighbour had just told the officers they believed he had a gun with him, Martino wrote.

Under the circumstances, it made sense that the officers would use their guns to protect themselves "from what they justifiably believed was an imminent threat of grievous bodily harm or death," the director said.

One of the officers told SIU investigators he believed the man had been the first to open fire, but it appears he mistook the other officer's initial gunfire for shots coming from the man, Martino wrote, describing it as "an honest but mistaken belief in the highly charged atmosphere that prevailed."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 6, 2025.

Paola Loriggio, The Canadian Press