N.S. mass shooting inquiry report must deliver ‘clear commentary’: family lawyer
HALIFAX — On July 22, 2020, about three months after a gunman murdered 22 people in Nova Scotia, a procession of grieving relatives marched to the local RCMP detachment, demanding an independent and open inquiry into the rampage.
Nick Beaton, who lost his pregnant wife Kristen Beaton in the April 18-19, 2020, killings, wore a sign with a photo of his young son kissing Kristen. “I miss my Mommy,” it read. “We deserve answers and the truth.”
On Thursday, Beaton and others who pressed for answers will see the result of their demands as a federal-provincial inquiry — which was announced a week after the 2020 demonstration in Bible Hill, N.S. — delivers its final report.
Sandra McCulloch, a lawyer who represents 14 of the victims’ families, said in an interview Tuesday they are hoping “for clear commentary on what things went wrong and what things ought to have been done better or differently.”