Canadian authorities on Tuesday urged residents at James Smith Cree Nation to stay at home when the police scan the area after a report on the possibility of the appearance of the suspect in the new stabbing where 10 people were killed. Mounted Royal Canadian Police in Saskatchewan said that he had responded to reports in an emergency warning that warned residents to immediately take refuge in a safe location.

The police surrounded a house in the area, while the authorities took the road to the original reserve, the Associated Press reported.

The latest development of emergency warnings came when the hunt for finding suspects entered the third day on Tuesday. Brothers Damien Sanderson, 31, and Myles Sanderson, 30, were suspects in the stabbing that injured 18 people besides killing 10 on Sundays. However, the police found Damien died in a grassy area at James Smith Cree Nation on Monday while Myles remained under escape.

Meanwhile, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that the country was “very still in crisis fashion”. “We need to ensure that everyone remains safe,” he added during the event at Vancouver.PM also urged all Canadian citizens to stand up with “Saskatchewan people today”, Reuters reported.

The stabbing incident, one of the most deadly in the history of Modern Canada, has caused “Inevitable Stress and Panic” in the community, the leaders of the first 74 countries in Saskatchewan said in a statement on Monday, asking members of the community to come forward with relevant information.

The police said several victims seemed to have been targeted, while others seemed random. However, some First Nation leaders have linked the murder with drug use but the police have not identified drugs or alcohol as a factor, Reuters reported.

A James Smith Cree Nation resident, Ivor Wayne Burns said that the Sanderson brothers belonging to the First Nations community and were under the influence of drugs at the time of stabbing.

CBC News reported that Myles had been sought since May, when he stopped meeting his parole officers after serving a sentence for robbery, damage, uttered threats and attacks. Assistant Commissioner Rhonda Blackmore from Saskatchewan Royal Canadian Mounted Police said that the fledged brother was considered armed and dangerous.

The CBC News report further states that more than 20 years, Myles has 59 punishment for various crimes.