BC may use the courts to sue OpenAI - Tumbler Ridge

Published on July 7, 2026 at 10:42 AM

The B.C. government has hired lawyers in both B.C. and California.

They are looking to pursue legal action to hold OpenAI accountable for its part in the shooting where eight victims were killed in Tumbler Ridge.

Attorney General Niki Sharma says no company or corporate leader should escape accountability when public safety is at risk.

Also killed was 18-year-old shooter Jesse Van Rootselaar, whose use of ChatGPT before the February murders is now the subject of multiple lawsuits against the chatbot's creator, OpenAI, and company founder Sam Altman.

The attorney general says everyone was shocked when information came out that the shootings might have been prevented had OpenAI reported the actions of the killer to police before the murders.

Sharma says any legal action the B.C. government would take would remain separate from litigation launched by family and community members.

B.C.'s Public Safety Minister Nina Krieger said in May that the police investigation into the shooting was in its final stages, and because no criminal process will be held, the coroner has already called an inquest into the deaths.

Brenna Owen, The Canadian Press

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