Medicine Hat News

N.S. shooting inquiry: Senior RCMP member learned of killer’s replica car in the news

- KEITH DOUCETTE

HALIFAX

The former RCMP commanding officer in Nova Scotia has told the inquiry into the April 2020 mass shooting that she first saw the killer’s replica police cruiser in a news report before she went to work on the second day of the rampage.

In a transcript released publicly on Monday of Lee Bergerman’s Aug. 2 interview with inquiry lawyers, the former assistant commission­er said she only had scant details early on April 19, 2020, of what had initially transpired the night before in the small rural community of Portapique, N.S.

On April 18 of that year, a gunman murdered 13 people in the community and then escaped in a replica police cruiser. The killer went on to murder another nine people the following day, before he was shot dead by police at a gas station.

Bergerman said she was first notified that something was happening in the town at around 11 p.m. on April 18, before she went to bed. She confirmed that she learned the next morning about killer Gabriel Wortman’s replica car but was “stunned” when she saw it on the news shortly before she left home to head to her office around 9:30 a.m.

“I do recall being, I would describe, stunned at the — when I saw the police car that they had,” said Bergerman, who retired from the RCMP in October 2021.

She added that she was convinced that one of the RCMP cruisers had been stolen, so she called Chief Superinten­dent Chris Leather to ask whether that was the case. “He confirmed that all of our police cars had been accounted for,” said Bergerman.

She said it was only after she made it to her office that she was informed that the photo had been provided to the RCMP by a witness.

In fact, the photo had been obtained from a relative of Lisa Banfield — the killer’s spouse — by Halifax Regional Police, who had sent it to the RCMP around 7:30 a.m. The photo wasn’t shared publicly by police until the RCMP issued a tweet around three hours later.

Meanwhile, Bergerman confirmed that she never considered using the province’s Alert Ready system to advise the public, saying that she was told informatio­n was being released through Twitter — as was H-Division Nova Scotia’s practice.

“So I was satisfied with what they were trying to do at that point. I never, I’ve never considered Alert Ready,” she said.

In public testimony on Monday at the public inquiry, Bergerman said she was aware that some senior officers in H-Division had made complaints about her performanc­e following the shooting rampage. She said her immediate supervisor in Ottawa, Deputy Commission­er Brian Brennan, told her in the fall of 2020 about the criticism.

“I completely disagreed with them (the complaints) and suggested he come to the division,” Bergerman said she told Brennan. She added that he did not tell her who made the complaints.

She said Brennan did visit her division, and she said she encouraged her officers to talk to him and to be “open and honest about what they thought and how they felt.”

Bergerman said that she later learned that Brennan’s visit had not been well received by H-Division members.

“He was just trying to do kind of a fact-based explorator­y visit, but I later learned that people were upset,” she testified.

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