Gunman’s spouse in N.S. shooting staying out of public inquiry due to charges: lawyer
HALIFAX — The spouse of the gunman in the Nova Scotia mass shooting won’t be co-operating with a public inquiry as long as she’s facing criminal charges for allegedly transferring ammunition to the shooter.
James Lockyer, a Toronto defence lawyer representing Lisa Banfield, said in an interview that he’s advised his client not to talk to the inquiry, which is attempting to unravel what occurred during her common-law partner’s April 18-19, 2020 rampage.
The killer took the lives of 22 people, including a pregnant woman, over 13 hours while driving a replica of an RCMP vehicle and dressed in a police uniform.
Lockyer told The Canadian Press Tuesday his client, “would have been in the commission’s office within 20 seconds of being asked,” were it not for the criminal charge. “It’s the criminal charges and nothing else,” he said