Nova Scotia mass shooting inquiry: Advice given to witnesses worries former judge

Nova Scotia mass shooting inquiry: Advice given to witnesses worries former judge
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan
A former Supreme Court of Canada justice working with the inquiry into the 2020 Nova Scotia mass shooting that left 22 dead says he was concerned to hear a top Mountie say he was advised not to proactively share information relevant to the inquiry. Visitors pay their repects at a memorial honouring the victims of the April 2020 murder rampage in rural Nova Scotia, in Victoria Park in Truro, N.S. on Tuesday, April 13, 2021.

A former Supreme Court of Canada judge working with the inquiry into the 2020 Nova Scotia mass shooting says he’s worried that the federal Justice Department has been discouraging witnesses from being forthcoming with relevant evidence.

In an Aug. 5 letter to the department, Thomas Cromwell cited advice the department gave Nova Scotia RCMP Chief Supt. Chris Leather before he testified before the commission of inquiry on July 28.

Cromwell said he was “deeply concerned” by Leather’s claim that he was advised “to be simply reactive rather than forthcoming,” an approach that Cromwell said “will hamper the commission in fulfilling its mandate.”

Leather testified that in an earlier interview with commission lawyers, he didn’t say anything about emails or a phone calls related to an April 28, 2020, meeting he attended with RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki because Justice Department lawyers had suggested he take “a reactive posture.”

He said he was advised not to proactively disclose the conversation with Lucki or the emails leading up to the meeting.

The April 28 teleconference, led by Lucki, focused on the effectiveness of the Nova Scotia RCMP’s news conferences in the days after a man disguised as a Mountie fatally shot 22 people on April 18-19, 2020.

Meeting notes taken by another high-ranking Nova Scotia Mountie, Supt. Darren Campbell, claim that Lucki said she had promised then-public safety minister Bill Blair that the RCMP would release details about the killer’s weapons to lend weight to the Liberal government’s pending gun control legislation.

That bombshell assertion has prompted allegations of political interference in a police investigation, an allegation that is being investigated by a parliamentary committee.

In a letter responding to Cromwell’s concerns, the Justice Department said its lawyers did not discourage Leather from being forthcoming, saying his comments about what he was told “can only be the result of a misunderstanding.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published August 16, 2022.

This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Meta and Canadian Press News Fellowship.

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