The Hamilton Spectator

Partner of Nova Scotia gunman renounces claim to $1.2M estate

Woman was named sole heir, executor in killer’s last will and testament

- MICHAEL TUTTON

HALIFAX—The girlfriend of a gunman who carried out a mass shooting in Nova Scotia has renounced any claim on his estate, initially valued at more than $1.2 million.

The woman — whom police have referred to as his common-law spouse — was named as the sole heir and executor of his estate in the last will and testament of Gabriel Wortman.

In a court document before probate court sworn on May 25, the woman seeks to renounce her status as heir, asking that the estate be administer­ed by the public trustee.

The 51-year-old denturist killed 22 people and burned residences in five communitie­s on April 18 and 19, beginning his rampage after arguing with and assaulting his partner at one of his properties in Portapique, N.S. Police have said the woman escaped into the woods. The RCMP have said she emerged from hiding early on April 19, went to the home of a neighbour and contacted police to inform them Wortman was driving a replica RCMP vehicle and had multiple firearms.

Wortman was killed by police later that morning at a gas station in Enfield, N.S.

In his will, the mass killer’s assets are listed as including six properties in Portapique and Halifax worth a total of $712,000, and $500,000 in personal belongings, including various forms of savings.

The public trustee is responsibl­e for paying the debts and outstandin­g taxes of the deceased and is charged with providing a full inventory of assets within three months.

The May 25 applicatio­n to turn over the assets to the public trustee was approved by the Nova Scotia court on June 11, noting “all required renunciati­ons” had been filed.

Some family members of victims have joined an applicatio­n to certify a class action to sue the estate for compensati­on for their losses and suffering as a result of the mass shooting.

Truro lawyer Robert Pineo has said their claim would likely far exceed the estate’s net worth, but the legal action would be “a form of justice against the gunman” and could help victims gain more informatio­n about what occurred.

Wortman’s will is dated March 29, 2011, and is written on four pages.

It said his partner, whom he referred to as his “female companion/friend,” was to have full control over his funeral.

He instructed that his body be wrapped “in a hudson bay blanket” and buried in a concrete vault at the cemetery in Portapique with no service, obituary or public notice of his death. Wortman owned two denture clinics in Dartmouth and Halifax and he bequeathed all the shares in both businesses to his partner as well.

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