Regina Leader-Post

N.S. Mounties `did their best' responding to shooter, inquiry told

Lawyer for Justice Dept. testifies

- LYNDSAY ARMSTRONG

• The RCMP’S response to the 2020 shooting rampage that left 22 Nova Scotians dead was far from perfect, but police did their best, the federal Justice Department said Friday.

During the final day of public proceeding­s at the federal-provincial inquiry into the mass shooting, Lori Ward, general counsel for the federal Department of Justice, said there’s always room for improvemen­t for all policing agencies.

“No response to a critical incident of this magnitude could be perfect, but when this crisis hit, the RCMP showed up, did their best and acted with courage, determinat­ion and dedication,” Ward said.

It’s difficult, she added, to separate what was known when the killer was at large on April 18-19, 2020, from what has been uncovered in the years since the tragedy. While hindsight is a valuable tool when used to learn lessons and make changes, it “can also impede a fair and objective evaluation of decisions made in real time.”

On the night of April 18, 2020, a man disguised as a Mountie and driving a car that looked exactly like an RCMP cruiser started killing neighbours and strangers in rural Portapique, N.S.

Ward said she is aware of the criticism levelled at the RCMP for allegedly dismissing witness accounts of the marked police car that the gunman was driving during the 13-hour rampage. She said the idea that the killer could have built such a car himself was beyond reasonable comprehens­ion and was unlike anything police had seen before.

When the RCMP were sent photos of gunman Gabriel Wortman’s replica police cruiser the morning of April 19, 2020, it was initially viewed with “disbelief and incomprehe­nsion” by all members, Ward said.

“To assert that (RCMP) should have continued to search for a car identical to their own as opposed to turning their minds to alternativ­es like decommissi­oned cars is to view the events through the lens of someone who has now been familiar with the existence of the replica car for more than two years,” she said.

Ward, who at times before the inquiry had tears in her eyes, highlighte­d that among the “problems and failings” of the RCMP in the aftermath of the shootings was the delay in discoverin­g some of the killer’s 22 victims.

Harry and Cory Bond, the sons of Peter and Joy Bond — a couple murdered in Portapique, N.S., the night of April 18, 2020 — started hearing from acquaintan­ces the next morning about shootings near Cobequid Court, the road where their parents lived.

The summary from the inquiry into the mass shooting says it was about 18 hours after the killings started before an RCMP officer found the Bonds’ bodies.

“The anguish felt by the families of those victims at the thought of that lapse of time is unimaginab­le,” Ward said, adding the delay is among the things the RCMP “wishes it could go back and change.”

To close out the final day of public inquiry proceeding­s, the three commission­ers thanked all those who participat­ed for their contributi­ons and the public for its engagement.

A final report detailing recommenda­tions from the inquiry will be released March 31, 2023.

Commission­er Leanne Fitch said that the inquiry has heard commitment­s from RCMP leaders and other “institutio­nal representa­tives” that they will be open to the recommenda­tions and are prepared to receive them.

“We are encouraged by these commitment­s and call on policy-makers, institutio­ns, community groups and members of the public to take action based on the coming recommenda­tions,” Fitch said.

The commission of inquiry said it has conducted interviews with more than 230 people, including 80 RCMP officers, and has released 31 summaries of evidence — known as foundation­al documents — alongside more than 3,800 supporting materials and exhibits. As well, more than 900 members of the public shared their experience­s of the mass shooting through the commission’s online survey.

Members of the public may submit suggestion­s for recommenda­tions through email, mail or over the phone until Sept. 30.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN
/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Lori Ward, representi­ng Department of Justice Canada,on Friday addresses the Mass Casualty Commission inquiry into the mass murders in rural Nova Scotia.
ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS Lori Ward, representi­ng Department of Justice Canada,on Friday addresses the Mass Casualty Commission inquiry into the mass murders in rural Nova Scotia.

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