Court ruling reveals grim details of Lionel Desmond suicide and murders
HALIFAX — A court fight over life insurance has revealed for the first time disturbing details about how former Canadian soldier Lionel Desmond fatally shot his mother, wife and daughter before taking his own life in the family’s home in rural Nova Scotia in early 2017.
In a decision released Monday, a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge determined proceeds from Desmond’s life insurance policy should be awarded to his late mother’s estate because evidence collected at the crime scene in Upper Big Tracadie, N.S., suggests the former infantryman died before his mother did.
The ruling says the sequence of their deaths is important because the policy named another man — Greg MacEachern — as contingent beneficiary, should Desmond’s mother Brenda die before her son.
To determine the grim chain of events on Jan. 3, 2017, Justice Nick Scaravelli examined the RCMP investigation, witness statements, recordings of 911 calls, files from Emergency Health Services, findings from post-mortem examinations and a report prepared by an expert coroner.