Desmond inquiry: presiding judge hints at key recommendation as testimony concludes
PORT HAWKESBURY, N.S. — The inquiry investigating why an Afghanistan war veteran in Nova Scotia killed his family and himself in 2017 heard from its final witness Tuesday — more than two years after the inquiry began.
John Parkin, the province’s chief firearms officer, faced questions related to Lionel Desmond’s legal purchase of the assault-style rifle he used to kill his wife, mother and 10-year-old daughter before he turned the gun on himself on Jan. 3, 2017.
The inquiry has heard the former infantryman’s firearms licence had been suspended in late 2015 after he was arrested in New Brunswick under the provincial Mental Health Act.
At the time, his wife Shanna told RCMP she had received texts indicating the former soldier — who had been diagnosed with severe PTSD in 2011 — was preparing to kill himself in their home in Oromocto, N.B.