Former RCMP officer testifies that warning tweet in N.S. mass shooting took too long
HALIFAX — A former RCMP officer told a Nova Scotia public inquiry on Tuesday that a tweet warning the public about the mass shooter driving a replica police vehicle should have been sent immediately after he ordered it, not two crucial hours later.
Retired Staff Sgt. Steve Halliday testified that he was assigned to notify the public on April 19, 2020 that the gunman was continuing his rampage in a vehicle marked to look exactly like an RCMP cruiser. The killer murdered 22 people over two days in central and northern Nova Scotia.
Halliday said he delegated this task to Staff Sgt. Addie MacCallum at the command centre in Great Village, N.S., at about 8 a.m. that day, with the “expectation that that was going to take place in the immediate future.”
However, the tweet with a photo of the mock RCMP vehicle wasn’t published until 10:17 a.m., too late to warn victims murdered in the Debert and Shubenacadie areas.