A resident of an apartment complex in Lethbridge, Alta., says she was shocked by a large police presence earlier this week after investigators searched a unit linked to the suspect in Monday’s deadly shooting in Montreal.
The search came a day after a man who lived in the complex contacted Noon shooting that left a Montreal police officer and a bystander dead.
Lethbridge police searched a unit on LeMoyne Crescent in West Lethbridge for hours Tuesday as part of the investigation.
Neighbor Anika Medema said she left the house before officers arrived and returned to find several police vehicles.
“There were police everywhere, like a bomb squad,” she told Global News on Thursday.
Medema said he did not know the accused resident, identified as 25-year-old Seth Scott Hatfield, who was a student at the University of Lethbridge.

The suspect in a shooting in Montreal’s Côte-des-Neiges neighborhood on Monday that claimed the lives of a police officer and a civilian has been identified as a 25-year-old man from Lethbridge, Alta.
Global News
Lethbridge police conduct a search at a home along Lemoyne Crescent, in Lethbridge, Alta., on Tuesday, June 23, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS / Matthew Bruce.
THE CANADIAN PRESS / Matthew Bruce
“He wasn’t very approachable. He kind of kept to himself really,” Medema said.
As more details emerge about the case, the woman said it’s troubling that she lived so close to the suspect.
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“Walking in here alone sometimes, it’s kind of scary, you know. Because if he was still here, what could have happened?” she said.
She said the investigation is a reminder that people often know little about those who live nearby.
“You don’t know your neighbor that well, so anything can happen,” she said.
Police cleared the complex late Tuesday night and the vehicles and caution tape have since been removed.
Lethbridge police have released few details about the search, saying only that officers were conducting a high-risk search and assisting Quebec authorities with the investigation.
It comes after a specialized national security unit within the RCMP announced Thursday that it has opened an investigation into ideologically motivated violent extremism.
The RCMP said branches of its Integrated Homeland Security Enforcement Team in Eastern Canada and the Northwest region are working together on a case that is separate from the homicide investigation led by Quebec provincial police.

These RCMP enforcement teams target terrorist groups or people who threaten national security.
While neither the RCMP nor Quebec provincial police have publicly released details about the suspected motive behind Monday’s shooting, Global News has reviewed a manifesto written by the suspected gunman that expresses hatred of women and calls for violence against police and high-powered figures such as bankers, CEOs and those working in the porn industry.
The suspected gunman exchanged gunfire with police outside a hotel in the city’s Côte-des-Neiges neighborhood, across from the Montreal offices of Aylo, owner of adult entertainment brands including Pornhub.
Provincial police are leading the criminal investigation into the shooting. The province’s independent police watchdog is looking into officer intervention, as is required whenever someone dies during a police operation.
A large group of people gathered in Côte-des-Neiges on Thursday evening to protest against the so-called incel ideology.
Incel stands for “involuntary celibacy,” a term for an internet subculture dominated largely by men who blame women and social structures for their lack of sexual or romantic relationships.

The protest began at the memorial for the 1989 Polytechnic massacre, during which a gunman motivated by hatred for feminism killed 14 women at an engineering university in Montreal.
The demonstration was meant to spark a wider conversation about misogyny, violence against women and the online radicalization of some young people.
Organizers said they chose to gather at the Polytechnique memorial because they believe Monday’s shooting serves as a reminder that hate-fueled violence against women remains a threat.
“Monday’s shooting could have been another Polytechnic,” said activist Céleste Trianon. “It was pure luck that no women were killed.”
– with file from The Canadian Press






