The Standard (St. Catharines)

Probe into mass killing in Nova Scotia continues

Police fear additional bodies will be found inside burned homes

- MICHAEL MACDONALD AND MICHAEL TUTTON THE CANADIAN PRESS

HALIFAX—Investigat­ors say a killer’s use of a mock police cruiser and an RCMP uniform almost identical to the real thing helped him escape detection as he travelled between 16 crime scenes in a rampage that has left at least 19 dead in Nova Scotia.

Chief Supt. Chris Leather told a news conference Monday that the crime scenes include five fires where it is feared additional bodies will be found inside burned homes.

That “speaks to why we don’t have a final total, because we expect that to rise in the coming days,” he said, adding that some victims knew the killer while others did not.

Investigat­ors in central and northern Nova Scotia are trying to piece together one of Canada’s deadliest mass killings. The shooter, identified as 51-yearold Gabriel Wortman, was killed Sunday after police intercepte­d him at a gas station in Enfield, N.S.

“We’ll never have an opportunit­y to interview the subject,” Leather said, “but we can say his ability to move around the province undetected was surely greatly benefited by the fact that he had a ... vehicle that looked identical in every way to a marked police car, and beyond that, he was wearing a police uniform, which was either a very good fabricatio­n of, or actually a police uniform.”

The victims of the weekend rampage include an RCMP officer, a teacher, two nurses, neighbours of the assailant and two correction­al officers killed in their home over 50 kilometres away.

For family members who are grieving, the common question amid their anguish was what could have motivated the carnage.

Kelly Blair, 48, lost her beloved younger brother Greg, 45, and his wife Jamie, 40, when they were gunned down in their home in Portapique, N.S.

As with families of other victims, it seemed that normal life collapsed in an instant in the small, rural community overlookin­g Cobequid Bay.

For Blair, a couple she “did everything together with” — from driving all-terrain vehicles to camping — was suddenly gone, and her “brother and best friend” senselessl­y cut down.

“Why? It’s just why?” she said during a brief telephone interview.

“I honestly don’t really know what happened. They were both shot. That’s all we know, we don’t know why. We don’t know,” she said.

Meanwhile, after an excruciati­ng day unable to contact her sister, niece and brother-in-law, Tammy Oliver-McCurdie learned Sunday evening that the family, neighbours of the killer, had been found dead in their Portapique home.

Jolene Oliver, who was turning 40 this year, her husband Aaron Tuck, 45, and their 17year-old daughter had moved to the community after Tuck’s father died a few years ago.

Oliver-McCurdie said it’s a small comfort to know that the close trio died together. “No matter how much they went through in life, they always stayed together, and there were times that they had nothing,” Oliver-McCurdie said in a phone call from Alberta.

Portapique is home to about 100 residents, most of them living in modest homes along Highway 2 on the north shore of Cobequid Bay.

But while the first victims were discovered by RCMP there, the rampage continued across a swath of northern Nova Scotia.

 ?? RILEY SMITH THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? People attend a makeshift memorial dedicated to Const. Heidi Stevenson at RCMP headquarte­rs in Dartmouth, N.S., on Monday. She was a 23-year member of the force and a mother of two.
RILEY SMITH THE CANADIAN PRESS People attend a makeshift memorial dedicated to Const. Heidi Stevenson at RCMP headquarte­rs in Dartmouth, N.S., on Monday. She was a 23-year member of the force and a mother of two.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada