Pathologist describes fatal gunshot wounds at Desmond inquiry in Nova Scotia
GUYSBOROUGH, N.S. — A forensic pathologist has testified that an Afghanistan war veteran shot his wife, daughter and mother from about one metre away before firing a bullet into his own forehead.
Dr. Erik Mont, Nova Scotia’s deputy chief medical examiner, provided expert evidence to a public inquiry into the Lionel Desmond case in Guysborough, N.S., today.
Mont also testified that the autopsy indicated Desmond — who was suffering from PTSD after returning from Afghanistan in 2007 — had traces of the antidepressant drug trazodone in his body.
Mont said his team’s autopsy showed that Shanna Desmond, the former soldier’s spouse, had two bullets lodged in her body after entering her chest and abdomen. Another bullet passed through her neck. The pathologist said Shanna died “within seconds,” noting the neck wound severed her spinal cord from her brain.