National Post (National Edition)

Cars, computers, property searched in N.S. murders

RCMP probing gunman who killed 22 people

- ADRIAN HUMPHREYS National Post ahumphreys@postmedia.com Twitter.com/AD_Humphreys

The RCMP searched computers, phones, a GPS and the in-car data of two vehicles in its probe of last month's Nova Scotia mass shooting in a bid to learn how much advanced planning the gunman did before setting off on his rampage.

New informatio­n outlining steps taken by the RCMP in the wake of the worst mass killing in Canada's history is revealed in police documents from the ongoing investigat­ion, released Monday on a judge's order.

The documents were prepared by the RCMP to get the court's approval to search various properties and to compel other people to assist police in their probe.

Heavily redacted versions of the documents were ordered released as part of a court motion by media organizati­ons.

The in-car data was sought for two vehicles recovered by police, a 2013 Ford Taurus and a 2015 Mercedes. A company called Berkshire Broman Corporatio­n, registered by gunman Gabriel Wortman in New Brunswick, owned the Ford and the Mercedes was registered in Wortman's own name. A witness said Wortman's common-law spouse usually drove the Mercedes.

Police were interested in retrieving the “stored data” from the cars that might show if he traced his deadly path ahead of time. In-car data systems are computers in the vehicle used to control audio, navigation and other features. They often link to the driver's cellphone. The results of the data search are not yet known.

“Gabriel Wortman went on a killing spree that covered in excess of 50 kilometres and the navigation track logs could provide informatio­n whether Gabriel travelled this route prior to April 18, 2020,” one RCMP document says.

Wortman, 51, had other cars — including a replica RCMP cruiser he used during his attacks — but he set them on fire.

He was dressed in an authentic RCMP uniform and drove a replica RCMP cruiser when he set off on a terrifying murder rampage across northern Nova Scotia, from the evening of April 18 to midday April 19.

He killed 22 people, police said.

Two months before the killings, Wortman was stopped by police and charged with speeding while driving the Ford Taurus on Portapique Beach Rd., the rural road into a community of properties, including some of Wortman's, the documents say.

Police also sought court permission to search electronic equipment found by officers, including a Samsung cellphone, a laptop, a memory card, a tablet and a GPS.

Among the informatio­n still withheld from the public in this version of released documents is who owned some of the devices, and what police believed they would find on them. Although what was found on the devices is not revealed, the documents do show there were no insurmount­able password or security access difficulti­es, as has happened in other mass murder investigat­ions.

One of the newly released documents is informatio­n filed by police with a justice of the peace to authorize a production order, which is a court order for someone who is not the suspect of the crime to turn over specific informatio­n. The warrant is for Telus Communicat­ions, a cellphone service based in Toronto, to release phone records.

Wortman's spouse likely owned the phone in question, as she told police he didn't have a cellphone of his own and an email sent from Wortman to an acquaintan­ce suggests he sometimes used his spouse's phone for people to contact him.

Warrants to search the gunman's properties were also issued to allow police to look for “firearms, ammunition, explosives, chemicals” and a final item that was censored. Investigat­ors were also looking for human remains, police-related clothing, identifica­tion and equipment and “documents related to planning mass murder events.”

Wortman burned down the buildings on his properties in Portapique at the start of his murder spree by dousing them with gasoline, the documents say. Evidence of the destructio­n is revealed in the documents.

At his property at 200 Portapique Beach Rd., police found an ammunition box containing a burnt $100 bill; a burnt receipt book; burnt parts of a gun; a black plastic bag and another ammunition box, the details of which are redacted.

At his property at 136 Orchard Beach Dr., police found “rounds,” presumably a reference to ammunition, but the details have been redacted.

Police seized nothing from his property at 287 Portapique Beach Rd.

Officers also searched his other properties in other communitie­s, including his two denture clinics, which were not burned.

It was at his property on Portland St., in Dartmouth, N.S., that police found the two cars and the electronic equipment, including a laptop computer, a tablet device, a router (which connects computers to a modem for accessing the internet), and a small SD card (a data storage device often used in cameras).

Police did not find or seize anything relating to their investigat­ion at his Halifax clinic.

The six documents released Monday repeat the basic narrative of the killings and summaries of harrowing witness interviews included in a document released last week, with the same redactions.

“Gabriel Wortman showed a complete disregard for human life as he shot at people sitting in their cars, people walking on the side of the road, and at people in their private homes,” one of the documents says, summarizin­g the vast crime being investigat­ed.

“Witness statement were obtained and Gabriel Wortman was described as a man who collected firearms, decommissi­oned police cars, police uniforms and equipment, was paranoid and had security systems in place at his properties.”

The investigat­ion into the killings is ongoing.

His first victims were those close to his home in Portapique, about 135 kilometres north of Halifax. He was shot and killed by police when he stopped for gas in Enfield, N.S.

The other documents released Monday include informatio­n to obtain (ITO) search warrants, police reports to justices of the peace detailing the results of their searches, and production orders, which are court orders to compel others to assist police.

There are at least 20 such ITOs from the police investigat­ion being sought by a consortium of media organizati­ons, including Postmedia.

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