RCMP officer hesitated after speeding by N.S. mass shooter on second day of killings
HALIFAX — In the seconds after a Mountie sped past a gunman wanted for a murderous rampage in Nova Scotia two years ago, the officer hesitated about whether to give chase, and by the time he did the suspect was gone.
Public inquiry documents released Thursday describe in detail for the first time an encounter between Cpl. Rodney Peterson and the killer on April 19, 2020. The two men — one a real Mountie and the other an impostor in a police uniform driving a replica RCMP vehicle — passed in opposite directions just before 9:48 a.m. on Highway 4 hear the community of Glenholme.
Peterson radioed to other RCMP members that the driver was wearing a reflective vest and “smiled as he went by,” prompting another officer to say, “That’s him. That’s got to be him.”
The corporal had come on shift that morning with instructions to look for the killer’s fake patrol car and to wear his body armour. Originally bound for Portapique, N.S., where the first 13 murders occurred on April 18, he had been diverted to the roadside scene where Lillian Campbell — the killer’s 17th victim — had been murdered that morning in Wentworth, N.S.