Grieving mother recalls plans for new life with son
Last Updated: Thursday, November 15, 2007 | 11:51 AM PT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
- VIDEO: Darrow MacIntyre reports for CBC-TV (Runs 19:37)
- VIDEO: (Contains graphic content) Paul Pritchard's video of Dziekanski's Taser death (Runs 10:00)
- VIDEO: Eric Rankin compares police, witness accounts to Pritchard’s video (Runs 3:56)
- YOUR VIEW: What's your reaction to this video?
- Taser video shows RCMP shocked immigrant within 25 seconds of their arrival
- Opposition calls for special prosecutor to look into airport death
- 'I was waiting for my beautiful boy,' mom of Taser victim says
Oct. 14 was supposed to be Zofia Cisowski's happiest day since her arrival in Canada from Poland eight years ago.
Zofia Cisowski says she spent nine hours at the Vancouver airport on Oct. 14 waiting for her son.
(CBC)
Robert Dziekanski, 41, was emigrating to Canada to join his mother in the B.C. Interior city of Kamloops, but he died in the airport after being stunned by an RCMP Taser.
"When I went — we were going to Vancouver — I was so exciting. I was so happy, I was thinking about to hug him and kiss him," said Cisowski, 61.
At about 4 p.m. that afternoon, Air Condor Flight 6070 from Frankfurt landed at the Vancouver International Airport with Dziekanski on board.
The plane was two hours late but even after it arrived, Cisowski spent another seven hours waiting for her son. She then made enquiries at the airport about his whereabouts and when told nobody had seen him and that he wasn't there, she went home, at about 10: 30 p.m.
Instead, almost 10 hours after he arrived in Canada, Dziekanski, who appeared frightened and lost, was shocked by a Taser and held down by four RCMP officers. He died within minutes of being shocked, at about 1:30 a.m.
Cisowski said on Wednesday that she has a hard time focusing on blame right now — all she can really think about is her son.
The plans they made for her son's new immigrant life are fresh in her mind and his photos are everywhere, his luggage still packed as if he'd just arrived.
Before police arrived Robert Dziekanski picked up office furniture and began to place it in the doorway between the customs area and the public lounge.
(Paul Pritchard)
If Dziekanski had flown from Frankfurt to Kamloops, he would be alive today, Cisowski said.
She chose to buy a plane ticket for him from Poland to Vancouver rather than from Poland to Kamloops, although she said both options were affordable for her.
"But I was trying to show him from Vancouver how beautiful is Canada because that is true.
"I was think about he will arrive at 1:40 p.m., take him in immigration maybe around two hours and we will drive back home during the day and I want to show him that beautiful view."
The RCMP's integrated homicide investigation team, the B.C. coroner's service, the Vancouver International Airport Authority and the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP are each conducting their own investigations into the circumstances of Dziekanski's death.
Cisowski's lawyer, Walter Kosteckyj, said he hopes something good comes from his death.
"Police will be more accountable for when they use Tasers and such things," Kosteckyj said. "Maybe it's just a wake-up call for all of us that perhaps we can just be better neighbours."
Share Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- Residents allowed home after gas leak, fire in Mission
- Residents of about 20 homes in Mission, B.C., have been allowed to return after a gas leak and fire forced their evacuation. more »
- Greyhound bus caught going twice the speed limit in B.C.
- A Greyhound bus has been impounded after the driver was caught driving more than twice the speed limit in a construction zone near Blue River, north of Kamloops, the Ministry of Transportation says. more »
- Cloverdale Rodeo 'racist attack' investigated
- Surrey RCMP are investigating an alleged racist assault on an animal rights protester outside the Cloverdale Rodeo this weekend that was posted on YouTube. more »
- How the weather info that storm chasers use can keep you safe
- Radar imagery and a stream of weather information are readily available to the public when severe weather bears down. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Oklahoma residents begin to return home after deadly tornado
- Rescue workers raced to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of nine children.
more »
- Video forensics: How easy would it be to fake a Rob Ford video?
- Two media outlets reported last week that they had seen a cellphone video of Mayor Rob Ford allegedly smoking crack, a claim that has gone global. If a video does surface, how easy would it be to determine its authenticity? CBC News asked video forensic analyst David McKay. more »
- Tim Bosma memorial today in hall that hosted his wedding reception
- The widow of Tim Bosma, the Hamilton man killed after taking two strangers on a test drive in a truck he had listed for sale online, will say goodbye to her husband at a public memorial today in the same hall where they celebrated their marriage just three years ago. more »
- Eritreans in Canada say consul still demands cash from them
- Evidence obtained by CBC News suggests Eritrea's top diplomat in Canada is again soliciting taxes from the Eritrean community despite a threat by Canada eight months ago not to renew his credentials if he kept at it. more »
- How the weather info that storm chasers use can keep you safe
- Radar imagery and a stream of weather information are readily available to the public when severe weather bears down. more »
- Cloverdale Rodeo 'racist attack' investigated
- Aboriginal woman settles lawsuit over 3½ years solitary confinement
- One dead as floatplane overturns in Bute Inlet
- B.C. mine's temporary foreign workers case dismissed
- B.C. teachers win fight over political posters in schools
- B.C. girl killed after 11-year-old crashes jeep
- Illegal tree cutting nets charges for arborist, homeowners
- Kamloops man skydives for 90th birthday
- Motorcyclist dead after head-on crash on Lions Gate Bridge
Zofia Cisowski says she spent nine hours at the Vancouver airport on Oct. 14 waiting for her son.
Before police arrived Robert Dziekanski picked up office furniture and began to place it in the doorway between the customs area and the public lounge.
