Times Colonist

Nova Scotia mass killer had hiding spaces for guns: RCMP

- MICHAEL TUTTON

HALIFAX — RCMP investigat­ors confirmed Thursday that the gunman who went on a rampage in Nova Scotia in April had hidden compartmen­ts in buildings and had converted personal assets into “a significan­t amount” of cash prior to his attacks.

However, a statement issued Thursday says one witness statement in court documents claiming Gabriel Wortman had committed prior murders and burned bodies was not corroborat­ed by follow-up interviews and property searches.

Investigat­ors say searches of the killer’s burned residence in Portapique haven’t turned up evidence to back the allegation of any murders before the April 18-19 killings of 22 people in central and northern Nova Scotia.

The Mounties were responding to the release earlier this week of previously blacked-out portions of witness allegation­s submitted by police to obtain search warrants.

Allegation­s included statements by a witness that the 51-year-old denturist smuggled drugs, but the RCMP say that to date the investigat­ion hasn’t revealed evidence the gunman was involved in importing or selling illegal drugs, or that he was part of a criminal organizati­on.

“Only this one witness has come forward with informatio­n that the gunman was actively and recently involved in the importatio­n and traffickin­g of illegal drugs,” the RCMP statement says.

“No other persons out of the close to 700 interviewe­d, including those closest to the gunman, have provided similar informatio­n that proves the gunman was an illegal drug smuggler and/or drug trafficker.”

Investigat­ors say they’ve corroborat­ed witness statements saying the killer had hidden rooms or compartmen­ts in his Dartmouth, N.S., property, and they agree he likely had hiding places in his Portapique residence — which burned to the ground on the night of his rampage.

“Investigat­ors have confirmed that the gunman had constructe­d areas in his Dartmouth residence which appear to be designed to hide items. Informatio­n also suggested that the purpose for constructi­ng these spaces was to hide firearms,” the statement says.

“Given that, investigat­ors have no reason to doubt the existence of hiding spaces constructe­d at both the Dartmouth and Portapique residences and believe that the purpose of constructi­ng these spaces was for hiding illegal firearms.”

Police say the gunman’s emails reveal the withdrawal of personal funds from his investment­s and bank accounts.

“The purpose of those conversion­s and withdrawal­s was based on the gunman’s belief that his assets were safer in his possession as it related to the current pandemic,” the statement says.

“A significan­t amount of currency has been recovered from the gunman’s burned out property in Portapique, which supports the pre-April 18 withdrawal of funds previously disclosed.”

The RCMP repeated previous statements that gunman had weapons smuggled in from the United States and had one gun illegally obtained in Canada.

“The gunman was involved in procuring firearms illegally … . Any transactio­ns of firearms on the part of the gunman or anyone else remains part of the active investigat­ion. As such, no further details in relation to this can or will be provided at this time,” police say.

The Mountie statement does say the gunman had relationsh­ips with Americans living in Maine and that he frequently visited these people.

The gunman was killed by police at a service station in Enfield, N.S., on April 19, 13 hours after his rampage began.

The documents that a media consortium, including The Canadian Press, went before a provincial court judge to obtain were heavily redacted, and Crown lawyers have only been releasing small portions — sometimes a single word or phrase — as the case progresses.

Previously blacked-out details from police applicatio­ns for search warrants were unsealed Monday by Judge Laurel Halfpenny MacQuarrie.

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