Skip to content
News Near Here
News Near Here
  • About Us
  • Montreal
    • Montreal Crime
    • Montreal News
  • Toronto
    • Toronto Crime
    • Toronto News
  • Vancouver
    • Vancouver Crime
    • Vancouver News
  • Contact
News Near Here
News Near Here
  • About Us
  • Montreal
    • Montreal Crime
    • Montreal News
  • Toronto
    • Toronto Crime
    • Toronto News
  • Vancouver
    • Vancouver Crime
    • Vancouver News
  • Contact
Image by RyanMcGuire from Pixabay

Tumbler Ridge shooter’s ChatGPT account banned in 2025 for references to violence

/ Vancouver News / February 21, 2026

OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, says it banned the account of Tumbler Ridge shooting suspect Jesse Van Rootselaar in 2025 after it was flagged internally as being misused in “furtherance of violent activities.”

In a statement to 1130 NewsRadio, the company says it considered referring the account to law enforcement, but determined the activity didn’t meet the threshold to do so.

In order to meet that threshold, the activity would have had to indicate “an imminent and credible risk of serious physical harm to others,” which it did not appear to do, the company says.

Also read:

OpenAI says it avoids over-enforcement of these policies because it can be distressing when, for example, police show up at the account holder’s home unannounced. This also raises privacy concerns, it says.

After hearing of the mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, OpenAI says it “proactively” reached out to the RCMP with information on the suspect’s use of ChatGPT and says it will continue to support the investigation.

Referrals to law enforcement are just one of the company’s approaches to mitigating risks, it says.

This is not the only example of alarming online activity by the shooter. Van Rootselaar’s Roblox account was also banned after the game developers found it was being used in a game encouraging users to go on a virtual shooting spree. As well, the suspect also made several posts detailing psychotic breaks, childhood traumas, and an interest in mass shooters.

And, as first reported by the New York Times, posts attributed to her on a different website dedicated to gore and death contain perhaps the most alarming red flags. One comment claims that, as a child, the user watched her stepfather attempt to commit suicide. Another says she finds watching violent content addictive. A tracing tool shows that she had recently visited the profile of an American school shooter.

– With files from Jack Rabb

← Previous Post
Next Post →

Related Posts

“Police Nab Suspect Following Violent Stabbing in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside”

The Vancouver Police Department says it has made one arrest after a stabbing in the city’s Downtown Eastside on Tuesday. […]

“2025 Housing Market Shaken: RBC Reports Significant Dip in Home Resales Amid Economic Turmoil”

Canada’s sluggish home resale market is likely to stay that way for the rest of the year. That is according […]

Multimillion-Dollar Mansions Sit on Indigenous-Owned Land in Richmond, B.C.

A landmark Aboriginal title claim successfully established by Cowichan Nation last week appears to encompass land occupied by a stretch […]

Recent Posts

  • Vancouver fast-tracking early liquor service for Canada Olympic gold medal hockey game
  • Tumbler Ridge shooter’s ChatGPT account banned in 2025 for references to violence
  • Tumbler Ridge shooter’s ChatGPT account banned in 2025 for references to violence
  • Tumbler Ridge shooter’s ChatGPT account banned in 2025 for references to violence
  • ‘Signs of spring’: B.C. premier reacts to U.S. Supreme Court decision on Trump tariffs

Categories

  • Canada
  • Montreal Crime
  • Montreal News
  • Toronto Crime
  • Toronto News
  • Vancouver Crime
  • Vancouver News
  • About Us
  • Montreal
  • Toronto
  • Vancouver
  • Contact

Copyright © 2026 News Near Here