Mass shooting inquiry: Lawyer calls for witnesses to sort out discrepancies over guns
HALIFAX — The inquiry investigating the 2020 mass shooting in Nova Scotia was asked today to sort out conflicting evidence about how the RCMP responded to a woman who says she alerted police years ago to the killer’s arsenal of illegal weapons.
Brenda Forbes, a former neighbour of the man who killed 22 people on April 18-19, 2020, says she told police in 2013 that Gabriel Wortman possessed illegal weapons when she filed a complaint about an alleged incident of domestic violence involving him and his spouse.
Anastacia Merrigan, a participating lawyer at the inquiry, says there is a series of discrepancies between evidence provided by Forbes and the RCMP.
In a summary of evidence released Tuesday, the inquiry learned that responding officers took “minimal notes” at the time and other information about Forbes’s complaint had been purged from the RCMP’s files.