I was there and witnessed a couple things the media or police didn't mention. First up, there were at least 30 police officers on the scene for about 7 hours. Approx. 10-14 police vehicles, including an unmarked Suburban, 2 swat trucks (varied at times), 3 conservation pickups, 3 city of Ottawa vehicles, 2 with flatbed trailers. Some of the officers were even carrying various AR-15s, y'know just in case this Elk turns out to be a fully automatic assault Elk I suppose. The circus the police put on was truly next level for what was an Elk just grazing along the side of a steep embankment, bordered by fences and the Otrain tracks (with their own set of fences). Aside from the fact that the Elk didn't need to be shot, people are ignoring the fact that I'm sure 100k was wasted on this 'operation'. I'd expect that type of response for a hostage situation or a REAL emergency, but an overgrown deer? Come the #### on! The police never once approached the animal, and once the swat team sniper took his spot up on the loading ramp at the side of the building I figured Mr.Elk was a goner anyway. In the "public safety" vein this was all done in supposedly, the police forced an elderly woman to climb down a rocky embankment, nearly falling in the process, just so she didn't walk up the ramp past the sniper. How's that for safety?
I suppose they never got a close enough shot on the elk because he didn't walk up to the driver side window of the guy holding the tranquilizer gun in the cab of his truck so they let the SWAT guy do his thing. They didn't attempt to corral it or get any closer at all. It spent the whole time either eating or laying in the shade, and the video clips shown were of EVERY single time it moved. One of the camera men said they only wanted "action shots" because "who cares about an Elk laying down and eating"
The sniper shot it at about 50 yards with a .308, a bow hunter could have easily made the shot. Why didn't they get one of their big tough AR-15 guys to 'escort' someone with the tranq gun? Bull gets unruly and then shoot him if you can't get close enough, but at least attempt it. NOPE!
I'm a hunter, I'm a gun guy, but I didn't see why this had to shake out the way the police insist it had to. Then again, what other response did you expect than the typical "we did everything we could..."? Would the public accept "Yeah, we just waited until 30 minutes before rush hour, hung out for almost 8 hours watching an Elk eat, then shot it, like we planned to all along, then play the PUBLIC SAFETY card!!"?
Should I expect 30 officers the next time I see a coyote in Orleans, a rabid coon in a dumpster downtown, or Deer near the 417? 'Cause y'know PUBLIC SAFETY is at risk there too!! The issue I really have is the over the top police response to something that doesn't need that kind of attention from the cops.
In hindsight, I really wish I'd taken a photo or two of the "scene" to really let people see their tax dollars at work. I did get a couple of the Elk though!