Nova Scotia’s mass shooting inquiry will soon focus on killer’s violent past: report
HALIFAX — The inquiry investigating the 2020 mass shooting in Nova Scotia has released an interim report that charts its progress so far and offers insight into what it hopes to accomplish over the next six months.
Having largely completed its initial fact-finding phase, the inquiry has already heard from several witnesses and disclosed more than 50,000 documents, including investigative files, emails, notes from first responders, transcripts of police communications and photographs.
The 162-page interim report contains no findings of fact or recommendations, which will be part of a final report that must by submitted by Nov. 1.
Meanwhile, the federal-provincial inquiry has moved on to explore “how and why” a lone gunman killed 22 people on April 18-19, 2020, while evading police capture for 13 hours.