The News (New Glasgow)

Nova Scotia woman’s recent death the result of shooting in 1976: RCMP

- BY MICHAEL TUTTON

Deanna Conant was in her mid30s when a gunshot wound left her disabled, forever changing her life.

Four decades later, the careful work of a team of Nova Scotia pathologis­ts showed the injury she suffered on June 23, 1976, in Lawrenceto­wn — on the outskirts of Halifax — was also what caused her death.

The Mounties confirmed on Thursday that a 34-year-old man who killed himself the same day had fired the fatal shot.

They declined to name the shooter or describe the circumstan­ces, but newspaper accounts from that time identified the man as Wesley Elvin Poole, 34.

The woman died on Feb. 16 of this year — 41 years later — at a Halifax nursing home. She was 77.

A local city councillor, archival clippings from the daily Halifax Chronicle Herald and an obituary identify her, though police declined to provide formal confirmati­on.

Conant’s obituary describes her as a woman “who enjoyed listening to music ... and spending time with her twin grandsons.” She is survived by a son and was predecease­d by her husband Russell, the obituary said.

A family member was unavailabl­e for comment.

However, Nova Scotia’s chief medical examiner said the case sends an important message about the fact that there is no statute of limitation­s on the work his office does.

Dr. Matthew Bowes said it wasn’t easy to make the final determinat­ion of the cause of death.

“Scars are formed (over the injury) as the body heals itself, and I’m just left with a set of structural abnormalit­ies in the spinal cord or the brain that are plausibly linked to the gunshot wound,” he said.

The physician said the wound had a profound impact on her health.

“The circumstan­ces of her disability were well understood,” he said. “She was permanentl­y disabled as a result of that gunshot wound.”

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