Keith Calderwood: Peterborough Police Officer Shot At Crack House Expected To Recover

Police Shooting Lindsay Ontario

First Posted: 06/23/11 10:57 AM ET Updated: 08/23/11 06:12 AM ET

LINDSAY, Ont. - An exchange of gunfire during a raid on an apparent crack house has left a central Ontario police officer recovering in a Toronto hospital and another man dead.

Const. Keith Calderwood, who was shot while executing a drug warrant Wednesday morning in Lindsay, Ont., was in stable condition at Toronto's St. Michael's Hospital.

Calderwood, 37, is a seven-year veteran of the Peterborough police force and a father of three.

"This was a bad day for our service," Peterborough police chief Murray Rodd said at a news conference in Lindsay. "We're very thankful our member is in stable condition."

The shooting happened at around 11:20 a.m. as Kawartha Lakes police and Peterborough Lakefield Police Service were conducting a criminal investigation at an apartment on Georgian Street, near Melbourne Street.

Five people were taken into custody and the coroner has been called in. Kawartha Lakes Police say four of the five people who were taken into custody during the raid have been released from custody without charges.

Jennifer Nicholson, 39, of Bowmanville, is charged with one count of breach of recognizance and is scheduled to appear in bail court today.

The Special Investigations Unit, the civilian agency that looks into police incidents involving a death, dispatched a team of 10 investigators to probe the circumstances surrounding the shooting.

Police officials from Lindsay and Peterborough wouldn't provide many details of the drug raid or the man who was shot and killed because it's in the hands of the SIU, but neighbours said the home was a drug den.

The Special Investigations Unit says a 21-year-old man from Durham Region was killed Wednesday as police executed a drug warrant at an apartment on Georgian Street. Frank Phillips with the SIU says the deceased man's name isn't being released yet.

"It is definitely a crack house," said resident Brenda Bradshaw, 52. "You see stuff happening in and out of there all the time, and the riff-raff coming in at all hours of the night. A lot of drugs happening over there."

Another neighbour who lives in the public housing complex across the street said he heard four to six shots fired after police officers swarmed the home.

Wayne, 52, who didn't want to give his last name, said police later brought out two men and one woman in handcuffs and took them away.

Rodd said the incident is another example of the dangers police officers face on a daily basis.

"This is every community right now basically in Ontario," he said. "It's a difficult and dangerous job our members do every day in every community. And this isn't a Toronto issue, this is an Ontario issue, this is a Canadian issue. It's a dangerous job."

Rodd said he and Calderwood's wife were able to speak to the officer before he was airlifted to Toronto's downtown island airport from Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay.

"He was in good spirits, he was certainly relieved to see his wife before he got on that helicopter," said Rodd. "And we had a member with him on the entire route on the helicopter. He was conscious and in significant discomfort."

Toronto police escorted the ambulance carrying Calderwood from the airport to St. Michael's where his family joined him at his bedside. Provincial police escorted Calderwood's wife from Peterborough to Toronto.

Calderwood is well known in his community for the charity work he does, including volunteering as a Big Brother and participating in the Pedal for Hope cycling tour, which raises money for kids with cancer.

"He's very family, very community oriented," said Rodd. "He's there to help any time he's called upon."

Mike Melnik, a local radio announcer for KRUZ FM, has worked with Calderwood on Pedal for Hope for seven years.

"He's very friendly," Melnik said. "He's humorous. We always give him a hard time because he's the guy who's always mugging for the camera and does a very good job at it. Just a lovable guy, a big teddy bear."

The scene of the shooting was still cordoned off Wednesday evening as the SIU conducted its investigation.

Neighbours said they weren't surprised by the incident. Angela, 41, who didn't want to give her last name, has lived in the area since she was nine and said things have become worse in the last seven years.

"Crack is one of the biggest things in this town right now," she said.

By Alexandra Posadzki, The Canadian Press

FOLLOW HUFFPOST CANADA

Filed by Brodie Fenlon  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 13
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
07:20 PM on 06/23/2011
Let me guess...this was another SWAT no-knock raid? Why do police departments insist on creating these volatile situations? These types of raids used to be reserved for hostage takers or other situations where someone's life was on the line.
Why not surround the house, announce your presence and if no one comes out wait until daylight to move in? Believe it or not, those are the rules of engagement for raids on private homes by soldiers in Afghanistan.
And if you are so worried that they are going to flush the drugs, why not do some surveillance and stop the people coming and going from the house.
photo
dubbleplusgood
turned off CNN, turned on CurrentTV
06:29 PM on 06/23/2011
Another terrible story brought to you by prohibition. Expect to see more coverage of 'crack houses' and 'marijuana grow operations' and 'organized crime' in the press because the Conservatives got their majority government (with a minority of votes) and need to fill 9 billion dollars worth of prison expansion.
photo
Jay from Ottawa
sovereignty sale, 1.3T OBO
04:55 PM on 06/23/2011
I wonder if they would have had a better outcome had a cop just knocked on the door and said ...
"Hey guys, I have three dozen officers and a search warrant here. My boss wanted us to knock down your door and crash in through your windows, but I figured I might as well try asking if you guys wouldn't mind coming out while we search your house."

The only thing worse than a crackhead with a gun is a scared crackhead with a gun.

I'm just happy hearing the cop is going to be okay, no reason to leave three kids and a wife without a father over a couple crackheads.

I'm all for legalization, but only because I'm hoping it'll result in Canada exchanging a lot of it's crack and cokeheads for Cannabis smokers and wekend mushroom eaters.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tyler Austin
Decentralized Commons and PR voted Senate please.
02:32 PM on 06/23/2011
Poor guy. I'm glad he's ok... thank god for bullet proof vest eh.
12:04 PM on 06/23/2011
If the job is too hot then they should quit. It is a dangerous job true, but there are jobs that are atleast as dangerous but don't get anywhere near the respect and compensation. Its time society cease to see policemen as heroic because the job is selfserving as much as it serves the public. Policemen are well compensated or most of them wouldn't be doing it.
10:46 AM on 06/23/2011
There are dangers, no question, all jobs do, but in comparison to many other careers, police work is not unsafe. It is not in the top 20 jobs in terms of injuries and fatalities. But you sure wouldn't know that with all the orchestrated sympathy whenever someone dies which is extremely rare. Miners, farm workers, lumberjacks, construction workers all have injuries and fatalities far higher than any cops.
photo
richjustdonothaveenough
To a 3rd world America
04:07 PM on 06/23/2011
Deep sea salvage sounds dangerous.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
10:31 AM on 06/23/2011
Lucky for the officer that the outcome was so good. American police get a lot more of this every day/
11:01 AM on 06/23/2011
They do and that is why the former law enforcement officers who make up LEAP (law enforcement against prohibition) are calling for an end to prohibition.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
henrypapillon
Mitt--free up the last 9 years' taxes
02:43 PM on 06/23/2011
Will that get rid of all the illegal firearms?
10:28 AM on 06/23/2011
I read this story and what upsets me is the apathy with which I now view police injuries. With police violating basic rights at G8/G20, officers rushing to "taze" at the slightest protest, refusal to identify themselves when they commit crimes, removal of ID badges when on duty... clearly, there is two system of justice in Canada.

I am sorry that people got hurt and wish no one any harm. Feeling sympathy for police, I just don't have it anymore.
photo
dubbleplusgood
turned off CNN, turned on CurrentTV
06:32 PM on 06/23/2011
I've often said drug prohibition enforcement and overuse of riot police serve only to separate the police from the community. Your response is entirely reasonable.