<p>The last suspect in the stabbing spree in a remote western Canadian Indigenous community died after being arrested on Wednesday at the end of a long manhunt, local media said.</p>.<p>Several broadcasters and newspapers, citing unnamed police sources, announced 32-year-old Myles Sanderson's death, without giving details of the circumstances.</p>.<p>Police are scheduled to hold a news conference at 7:30 pm local time (5 am Friday IST).</p>.<p>Earlier, police said Sanderson had been "located and taken into police custody... at approximately 3:30 pm today." "There is no longer a risk to public safety relating to this investigation."</p>.<p>An <em>AFP </em>reporter at the scene saw several police cars surrounding a white pickup along the side of a highway.</p>.<p>An hour before Sanderson's arrest, police issued an alert about a man armed with a knife in a stolen white Chevy Avalanche nearby, making a link to the stabbing case and urging locals to shelter in place.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/husband-wife-stab-each-other-to-death-in-delhi-1142970.html" target="_blank">Husband, wife stab each other to death in Delhi</a></strong></p>.<p>The truck in a ditch pointed to a dramatic end to a four-day manhunt across the vast Prairies region for Sanderson and his brother, believed to be responsible for the killings on Sunday.</p>.<p>It also offered relief to a nation distressed by one of modern Canada's deadliest incidents of mass violence.</p>.<p>The manhunt had stretched across three provinces, and gone from Regina, Saskatchewan province's capital 300 kilometers to the south, and then back to the James Smith Cree Nation -- in response to reported sightings.</p>.<p>On Monday the search turned up the body of 31-year-old Damien Sanderson in a grassy field in the Cree community.</p>.<p>Authorities said he likely had been killed by his 32-year-old sibling, who remained a fugitive until his arrest near the town of Rosthern in Saskatchewan -- about 100 kilometres west of where the stabbings occurred.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/suspected-serial-killer-murdered-6-security-guards-in-madhya-pradesh-1141523.html" target="_blank">Suspected serial killer murdered 6 security guards in Madhya Pradesh</a></strong></p>.<p>The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations said it was "relieved that Myles Sanderson is in police custody."</p>.<p>Now, it added, "the healing process begins."</p>.<p>Myles Sanderson has a history of explosive violence that led to 59 past convictions, and is also wanted for breaching parole in May after serving part of a sentence for assault and robbery.</p>.<p>But with no known motive for the latest attacks, relatives of victims spoke out earlier Wednesday about their "nightmare" and called for answers from authorities.</p>.<p>Mark Arcand said the killings that claimed the lives of his sister Bonnie Burns, 48, and her son Gregory Burns, 28, were a "horrible, senseless act."</p>.<p>"We're broken," he said, describing emotions of anger and sadness. "It still feels like it's a nightmare. It doesn't feel real."</p>.<p>"How did this happen to our family? Why did it happen? We have no answers," he told at a press conference. "We just know that our family members were killed in their own home, in their yard."</p>.<p>Arcand recounted how his sister had rushed out of her house to help her son, who was bleeding out in their driveway after being stabbed several times.</p>.<p>"She was stabbed two times, and she died right beside him," he said. "She was trying to protect her son."</p>.<p>A neighbour ran over to try to stop the assailants, but she too was killed, he said.</p>.<p>The family and the community, Arcand added, has "a steep hill to climb, and we're going to climb it together, united."</p>.<p>The coroner has released the names of the deceased victims -- six men and four women aged 23 to 78 years old.</p>.<p>All but one were members of the Cree community. The other was a widower who lived with his adult grandson in nearby Weldon.</p>.<p>Seventeen adults and one young teen were wounded in the attacks, police said. Among them was another son of Bonnie Burns who was slashed in the neck.</p>.<p>They also include a veteran, an addiction counsellor, and a mother of two who worked as a security guard at a local casino, say friends and families on social media.</p>.<p>"I lost a lot of family yesterday, bodies everywhere on rez, some deceased and many others with severe knife wounds and bleeding," Michael Brett Burns posted on Facebook. "It was a war zone."</p>.<p>The attack was among modern Canada's deadliest incidents of mass violence.</p>.<p>The nation has also witnessed in recent years a gunman masquerading as a policeman kill 22 people in Nova Scotia, another kill six worshippers at a Quebec City mosque, and a driver of a van kill 11 pedestrians in Toronto.</p>.<p>Police believe some of the victims in Sunday's rampage were targeted and others were attacked randomly.</p>.<p>Ten people remain hospitalised, including three in critical condition, according the Saskatchewan Health Authority. Seven others have been discharged.</p>
<p>The last suspect in the stabbing spree in a remote western Canadian Indigenous community died after being arrested on Wednesday at the end of a long manhunt, local media said.</p>.<p>Several broadcasters and newspapers, citing unnamed police sources, announced 32-year-old Myles Sanderson's death, without giving details of the circumstances.</p>.<p>Police are scheduled to hold a news conference at 7:30 pm local time (5 am Friday IST).</p>.<p>Earlier, police said Sanderson had been "located and taken into police custody... at approximately 3:30 pm today." "There is no longer a risk to public safety relating to this investigation."</p>.<p>An <em>AFP </em>reporter at the scene saw several police cars surrounding a white pickup along the side of a highway.</p>.<p>An hour before Sanderson's arrest, police issued an alert about a man armed with a knife in a stolen white Chevy Avalanche nearby, making a link to the stabbing case and urging locals to shelter in place.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/husband-wife-stab-each-other-to-death-in-delhi-1142970.html" target="_blank">Husband, wife stab each other to death in Delhi</a></strong></p>.<p>The truck in a ditch pointed to a dramatic end to a four-day manhunt across the vast Prairies region for Sanderson and his brother, believed to be responsible for the killings on Sunday.</p>.<p>It also offered relief to a nation distressed by one of modern Canada's deadliest incidents of mass violence.</p>.<p>The manhunt had stretched across three provinces, and gone from Regina, Saskatchewan province's capital 300 kilometers to the south, and then back to the James Smith Cree Nation -- in response to reported sightings.</p>.<p>On Monday the search turned up the body of 31-year-old Damien Sanderson in a grassy field in the Cree community.</p>.<p>Authorities said he likely had been killed by his 32-year-old sibling, who remained a fugitive until his arrest near the town of Rosthern in Saskatchewan -- about 100 kilometres west of where the stabbings occurred.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/suspected-serial-killer-murdered-6-security-guards-in-madhya-pradesh-1141523.html" target="_blank">Suspected serial killer murdered 6 security guards in Madhya Pradesh</a></strong></p>.<p>The Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations said it was "relieved that Myles Sanderson is in police custody."</p>.<p>Now, it added, "the healing process begins."</p>.<p>Myles Sanderson has a history of explosive violence that led to 59 past convictions, and is also wanted for breaching parole in May after serving part of a sentence for assault and robbery.</p>.<p>But with no known motive for the latest attacks, relatives of victims spoke out earlier Wednesday about their "nightmare" and called for answers from authorities.</p>.<p>Mark Arcand said the killings that claimed the lives of his sister Bonnie Burns, 48, and her son Gregory Burns, 28, were a "horrible, senseless act."</p>.<p>"We're broken," he said, describing emotions of anger and sadness. "It still feels like it's a nightmare. It doesn't feel real."</p>.<p>"How did this happen to our family? Why did it happen? We have no answers," he told at a press conference. "We just know that our family members were killed in their own home, in their yard."</p>.<p>Arcand recounted how his sister had rushed out of her house to help her son, who was bleeding out in their driveway after being stabbed several times.</p>.<p>"She was stabbed two times, and she died right beside him," he said. "She was trying to protect her son."</p>.<p>A neighbour ran over to try to stop the assailants, but she too was killed, he said.</p>.<p>The family and the community, Arcand added, has "a steep hill to climb, and we're going to climb it together, united."</p>.<p>The coroner has released the names of the deceased victims -- six men and four women aged 23 to 78 years old.</p>.<p>All but one were members of the Cree community. The other was a widower who lived with his adult grandson in nearby Weldon.</p>.<p>Seventeen adults and one young teen were wounded in the attacks, police said. Among them was another son of Bonnie Burns who was slashed in the neck.</p>.<p>They also include a veteran, an addiction counsellor, and a mother of two who worked as a security guard at a local casino, say friends and families on social media.</p>.<p>"I lost a lot of family yesterday, bodies everywhere on rez, some deceased and many others with severe knife wounds and bleeding," Michael Brett Burns posted on Facebook. "It was a war zone."</p>.<p>The attack was among modern Canada's deadliest incidents of mass violence.</p>.<p>The nation has also witnessed in recent years a gunman masquerading as a policeman kill 22 people in Nova Scotia, another kill six worshippers at a Quebec City mosque, and a driver of a van kill 11 pedestrians in Toronto.</p>.<p>Police believe some of the victims in Sunday's rampage were targeted and others were attacked randomly.</p>.<p>Ten people remain hospitalised, including three in critical condition, according the Saskatchewan Health Authority. Seven others have been discharged.</p>