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Canadian officials to meet with OpenAI safety team after school shooting

By Thomson Reuters Feb 23, 2026 | 1:16 PM

By Ryan Patrick Jones

Feb 23 (Reuters) – Canada has summoned top officials from OpenAI for a meeting about the company’s safety protocols, an official said on Monday, after the ChatGPT maker said it did not reach ​out to police about an account it banned last year belonging ‌to mass shooter Jesse Van Rootselaar.

Van Rootselaar, 18, killed eight people in a small British Columbia town on February 10 and then took her own life. OpenAI said it banned her account last year on the chatbot ChatGPT for policy violations which it said did not meet ‌internal ​criteria for reporting to law enforcement.

Senior members of OpenAI’s ⁠safety team will travel from ⁠the United States to Ottawa for a meeting on Tuesday, Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon told reporters, “to have an explanation of their safety protocols, and when they escalate, and their threshold of escalation to police.”

The case has intensified ​scrutiny of what obligations tech companies have to report threatening user activity to law enforcement

Van Rootselaar, who police say was born a male but identified ⁠as a woman and began transitioning six years ⁠ago, had a series of previous mental-health-related interactions with police. ​The killings took place in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, a town of around 2,400 ​in the Canadian Rockies.

OpenAI said in a previous statement it banned ‌Van Rootselaar’s account in June 2025 after it was flagged by systems that identify “misuses of our models in furtherance of violent activities.” The company considered referring the account to police, but determined it didn’t meet the threshold of posing an imminent ⁠and credible risk of serious physical harm to others, it said.

Solomon said “all options are on the table” when asked what Ottawa might do to protect Canadians from online harm, ⁠citing a forthcoming bill ‌on online privacy and data. He did not give ⁠details.

“Canadians expect, first of all, that children, particularly, are kept ​safe and ‌that these organizations act in a responsible manner,” Solomon ​said.

OpenAI didn’t immediately ⁠respond to a request for comment.

The company said it contacted the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) after the shooting to provide information about Van Rootselaar’s use of ChatGPT.

RCMP Staff Sergeant Kris Clark confirmed OpenAI reached out to the police force after the shooting, but didn’t provide additional details.

(Reporting by Ryan Patrick Jones in Toronto;Editing by David ​Ljunggren and David Gaffen)