Parents want arrest after son 'deliberately kicked' in neck during Edmonton hockey game
Warning: This story contains graphic descriptions and images.
A Junior C hockey player says he is lucky to be alive after his neck was sliced open by a hockey skate last week in an act his parents believe – and the referee ruled – was an intentional kick.
"I was on the ice. He stepped on my head," Richie Compo recalls of the Sept. 27 incident at Castle Downs Recreation Centre in north Edmonton.
"I checked my neck, my hand, there was blood. So I ripped off my helmet."
Compo – who plays for the Junior Braves in the Noralta Junior C Hockey League – recalls begging for the help of the opposing team's trainer, who jumped on the ice to assist.
"I looked him dead in the eyes [and said] 'Don't let me die. Please don't let me die. I don't want to die," Compo told CTV News Edmonton.
"There was no, no pain, it was just 'I'm dead.' That’s all I could think was 'I'm dead.'"
The 20-year-old was rushed from the rink in an ambulance. He received more than a dozen stitches and spent the night in hospital.
He was wearing a mandatory cage on his helmet and a neck guard at the time but said the skate nearly nicked his jugular anyway.
Richie Compo's neck after he was cut by skate in north Edmonton on September 27, 2023. (Credit: Peggy McMillan)
'VIOLENT CONSIDERING THE VULNERABLE POSITION': REF
The player accused of kicking him, Nate Plaunt of the South West Zone Oil Kings, was given a match penalty with 57 seconds left in the game. The final score was 9-5 for the Oil Kings.
In his written incident report to Hockey Alberta, game referee Spencer Acheson stated that he gave Plaunt a match penalty for "deliberately kicking" an opponent in his "neck/face area."
"I considered the act to be a kicking motion and one that was violent considering the vulnerable position of the Braves player," the report states.
Plaunt received an automatic three-game suspension and will have a discipline hearing on Thursday where league officials can decide to ban him for longer.
Chris Hurley, the president of the NJHL, declined to comment to CTV News Edmonton until after the hearing is complete.
"I am very sorry for your son’s injury and suffering," Hurley wrote in an email to Compo's parents.
"It has been and always will be the intention and purpose of the Noralta Junior Hockey League to [provide] a safe and enjoyable league for our players, volunteers and our fans."
Richie Campo and Peggy McMillan in an interview with CTV News Edmonton on October 3, 2023. (CTV News Edmonton)
ASSAULT COMPLAINT FILED
Police are also investigating the on-ice incident as an "alleged assault," a spokesperson for Edmonton Police Service confirmed Tuesday, while saying he had no other details to share.
"That boy looked around, lifted his leg, like a stomping motion, and right on my son’s head," said Peggy McMillan, Richie's mom.
She believes what happened at the rink was assault with a weapon and should be dealt with not only by league officials but also in a courtroom.
"If this were to happen off the ice, not be a hockey player, you’d be charged. Mistake, impulsive thing, it doesn’t matter. That impulsive decision coulda took my son's life," she said.
"There’s consequences for actions, they’re not little boys, they’re in their, you know, 18 to 21. They know right from wrong."
Compo also believes the kick was intentional but said he wasn't sure his neck was the target.
"I don't think he meant to kill me. He didn't mean to step on my head, but maybe my arm or chest or something," he said.
"That's too much. That's so unnecessary, so unneeded."
On Thursday, police asked anyone with video of the incident or who witnessed it to call them at 780-423-4567.
CTV News Edmonton reached out to both the Junior Braves and South West Zone Oil Kings for comment on this story.
With files from CTV News Edmonton's Jeremy Thompson
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

TREND LINE Liberals and NDP tied in ballot support, Conservatives 19 points ahead: Nanos
The governing minority Liberals' decline in the polls has now placed them in a tie for support with their confidence-and-supply partners the NDP, while the Conservatives are now 19 points ahead, according Nanos' latest ballot tracking.
Filmmakers in Bruce Peninsula 'accidentally' discover 128-year-old shipwreck
Yvonne Drebert and Zach Melnick were looking for invasive mussels when they found something no has laid on eyes for 128 years.
Sask. premier says province will stop collecting carbon levy on electric heat
Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe says the province intends to stop collecting the carbon levy on electric heat.
A holiday meal in Canada will be an 'expensive proposition': food lab
Celebrating with your family this December could come with increased expenses as data shows many traditional holiday foods are going up in price.
Watch this: Kayaker drops 20 metres from Arctic Circle waterfall
Heart-racing video shows 32-year-old Spanish kayaker Aniol Serrasolses paddling through rapids and ice tunnels before plunging 20 metres down an icy waterfall off Svalbard, Norway.
A 'predator' at CSIS: B.C. officers allege rape, harassment and a toxic workplace culture
Four officers with the B.C. CSIS physical surveillance unit who say it was a toxic workplace where bullying, harassment and worse went unchecked, and where young female officers were victimized.
opinion Don Martin: With Trudeau resignation fever rising, a Conservative nightmare appears
With speculation rising that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will follow his father's footsteps in the snow to a pre-election resignation, political columnist Don Martin focuses on one Liberal cabinet minister who's emerging as leadership material -- and who stands out as a fresh-faced contrast to the often 'angry and abrasive' leader of the Conservatives.
'Endgame' author on controversial new book about Royal Family's activities since Queen's death
Journalist and author Omid Scobie spoke to CTV's Your Morning Wednesday about his second book 'Endgame: Inside the Royal Family and the Monarchy's Fight for Survival.'
Shane MacGowan, lead singer of The Pogues and a laureate of booze and beauty, dies at age 65
Shane MacGowan, the singer-songwriter and frontman of 'Celtic Punk' band The Pogues, best known for the Christmas ballad 'Fairytale of New York,' died Thursday, his family said. He was 65.