National Post

N.S. Mounties who fired on bystander cleared in new review

Search for man responsibl­e for mass shooting

- Michael Macdonald

HALIFAX • No criminal charges should be laid against two Mounties who mistakenly shot at a bystander outside a Nova Scotia firehall as police were searching for the man responsibl­e for a mass shooting that would claim 22 lives, Ontario’s police watchdog says.

In a report released Friday, the independen­t Special Investigat­ions Unit said constables Terry Brown and Dave Melanson acted reasonably when they opened fire outside the Onslow firehall on the morning of April 19, 2020.

No one was hurt, but some people inside the firehall, including two firefighte­rs, were left traumatize­d. In all, five shots were fired. Bullet fragments hit an outside wall, the firehall’s garage door and a fire truck.

Onslow was one of more than a dozen largely rural communitie­s the killer drove through during a 13-hour rampage that started in Portapique, N.S., on the night of April 18, 2020. Disguised as a Mountie and driving a car that looked exactly like an RCMP cruiser, Gabriel Wortman fatally shot 13 people on the first night, and the next day he killed another nine people, including a pregnant woman and an RCMP officer.

He was shot dead later that day by two Mounties at a gas station in Enfield, N.S.

The SIU’S report marks the second time Brown and Melanson have been cleared of wrongdoing.

In March 2021, Nova Scotia’s police oversight agency, the Serious Incident Response Team, found that the “totality of the evidence” led the officers to believe the killer was standing just 88 metres away when they stopped their unmarked car in front of the firehall.

At the time, Brown and Melanson had been told about the gunman’s replica RCMP cruiser and that he was wearing a high-visibility orange safety vest.

The officers later told SIRT investigat­ors that as they drove past the firehall, they spotted an RCMP cruiser in the parking lot and a man in a reflective vest standing next to the vehicle. The SIRT report says the two officers repeatedly tried to advise other RCMP officers by radio of what they were seeing but couldn’t get through because the radios were jammed by too many transmissi­ons.

Both officers exited their vehicle with their rifles, and the report says they yelled, “Police!” and “Show your hands!” That’s when the man in the vest ducked behind the car and ran toward the firehall, the SIRT report says. One officer fired four shots and the other a single shot.

The Nova Scotia watchdog concluded the officers had a “lawful excuse” to fire their guns.

“They discharged their weapons in order to prevent further deaths or serious injuries,” SIRT’S report said. “The (officers) had reasonable grounds to believe the person they saw, who was disobeying their orders, was the mass murderer who had, in the preceding hour, killed three more persons.”

But questions were raised about the report by Nova Scotia’s police oversight agency soon after it was released.

The two firefighte­rs who were in the firehall, Chief Greg Muise and deputy chief Darrell Currie, pushed for a further investigat­ion.

Calls for another investigat­ion grew after a federal-provincial public inquiry released its final report in March of last year. The report was intensely critical of the RCMP’S overall response to the mass shooting and its near-miss at the firehall.

“The RCMP command group did not recognize the gravity of the Onslow firehall shooting,” says one of the inquiry report’s main findings. “They failed to take the necessary steps to evaluate the circumstan­ces of the shooting, secure the scene, or evaluate the involved members’ capacity to continue with the critical incident response.”

As well, the inquiry found that after the shooting, “the RCMP failed to adhere to its policies and the Serious Incident Response Team regulation­s with respect to the procedures that must be followed after a serious incident that attracts SIRT jurisdicti­on.”

In April 2023, the Nova Scotia watchdog asked its Ontario counterpar­t to determine if the inquiry had unearthed evidence that could have affected SIRT’S previous decision not to charge Melanson and Brown.

The SIU report released Friday says the inquiry heard that the man police mistook for the killer — emergency management co-ordinator David Westlake — had denied the Mounties’ assertions that he had ducked and ran just before the officers opened fire.

Westlake told inquiry investigat­ors that at no time did he hear anyone yelling at him to show his hands. As well, of the eight people living near the firehall who spoke to investigat­ors, none reported hearing anyone say,

THE REPORT WAS ... CRITICAL OF THE NEAR-MISS AT THE FIREHALL.

“Show your hands!”

The SIU report notes that the Mountie inside the parked cruiser, Const. Dave Gagnon, told the inquiry he did not hear any police commands even though his window was down.

The Ontario watchdog’s report says the new evidence, if true, could change SIRT’S decision “because (Westlake’s) ignoring commands and ducking was part of the basis for the (officers’) belief that (he) was the gunman.”

The SIU, however, concluded that this evidence falls short of justifying criminal charges partly because it was deemed unreliable. The report found Westlake’s assertions were at odds with notes he took later that day. According to the SIU, Westlake’s notes say that as officers in a grey car yelled “get down,” he then “ducked and ran into main entry” of the firehall as shots rang out.

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