Medicine Hat News

Warning signs of N.S. mass shooter’s paranoia, guns, prior abuse noted in warrant

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HALIFAX

A newly released document details warning signals of paranoid behaviour and unusual stockpilin­g of guns and gasoline by the man who went on a rampage that killed 22 people in Nova Scotia last month.

In the court document made public Tuesday following an applicatio­n by media organizati­ons, seven witnesses who’d encountere­d Gabriel Wortman either recalled him talking about owning guns or had seen guns at locations including his clinic in Dartmouth, N.S., and his property in Portapique, N.S., dubbed “the warehouse.”

The 40 pages offer disturbing glimpses of his rural property, located 44 kilometres west of Truro, where the 51-year-old denturist entertaine­d friends and kept a well-stocked bar and a collection of motorcycle­s.

One witness, who met a Halifax Regional Police officer to give a statement on April 19, described the gunman as an abusive “sociopath” who’d kept a rifle by the fireplace that was “like a machine gun.”

An acquaintan­ce who visited told police that Wortman had installed a security system in his warehouse, though he also showed off his guns and police cars to visitors.

Police have previously stated that beginning on the night of April 18, the killer used accelerant­s to light fires in five communitie­s and murdered people with four semi-automatic weapons he wasn’t licensed to own as he drove about in a replica police car. He was killed by police before noon on April 19.

In the court documents, witnesses offered additional figures and details - including two estimates that Wortman had bought $800 worth of gasoline.

Emails from the killer written four days before the mass shooting provided no hint of what was to come.

“I am currently residing at my cottage in Portapique. I am enjoying this prelude to retirement, unfortunat­ely not able to get to ...,” says one message, the last word removed by the Crown lawyers who released the document.

“I am around in the a.m.’s 9-12 studying the news on U-tube. Stay safe, Gabe.”

However, other informatio­n gathered by police paints a darker picture of the killer’s state of mind.

A former colleague told police officers the gunman was “paranoid” about the COVID-19 pandemic, saying he’d experience­d “a mental breakdown” while discussing a deed for a property in Portapique.

The witness was among those who said the killer had talked about various types of guns, assault rifles and handguns in the past.

The witness also said Wortman “had been disturbed and that he was severely abused as a young boy,” adding he was “very smart, cheated and was a psychopath” and had abused a person whose name is removed from the document.

Two other witnesses told police Wortman had been abusive in the past, though the context, dates and details are not in the court document.

Another witness gave an undated statement to the Halifax Regional Police saying he had met the gunman in 2011, calling him “controllin­g” and “paranoid.” The witness said Wortman had described ways to get rid of bodies using burning and chemicals.

In addition, on April 20, a person who sold supplies that Wortman used to create an RCMP insignia on his replica vehicle described how Wortman had purchased several sheets of reflective blue vinyl.

The witness said that the gunman “had a police cruiser that he bought at an auction and wanted to do it up like a police car.” He said he told Wortman “he would get in trouble for driving the car with decals, and Gabriel said that he knew and it would be illegal.”

According to informatio­n provided by the gunman’s common law spouse, the April 18-19 violence began when they were having drinks at his warehouse in Portapique and had been talking to friends on a video chat.

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