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OpenAI says it banned the Tumbler Ridge shooter's account in June 2025
Summary
OpenAI says it banned the account linked to the Tumbler Ridge shooter in June 2025 and later provided information to the RCMP after the February shooting.
Content
OpenAI says it banned the account linked to the teenager who was later identified in the Tumbler Ridge shooting in June 2025. The company told CBC News that automated tools and human review detected misuse of its models and prompted the ban. OpenAI said the account's activity in June did not meet its higher threshold for referral to law enforcement, which it defines as an "imminent and credible risk" of serious physical harm. After the February shooting, OpenAI says it proactively provided information to the RCMP and is reviewing whether its criteria for referring cases to police can be improved.
Key facts:
- OpenAI says the account was detected by automated tools and human investigations and was banned in June 2025.
- The company says the account did not meet its threshold at that time to refer the case to law enforcement, defined as an "imminent and credible risk."
- RCMP has identified Jesse Van Rootselaar as the person responsible for the deaths of eight people in Tumbler Ridge and says digital and physical evidence is being collected and reviewed.
- OpenAI confirms it reached out to the RCMP with information after the February shooting and says it is reviewing its referral procedures.
Summary:
OpenAI reports it took internal action in June 2025 by banning the account and later shared information with the RCMP after the February shooting. The RCMP says it is methodically collecting and processing digital and physical evidence as part of its investigation. Undetermined at this time.
