RCMP struggled to promptly inform families in aftermath of Nova Scotia mass shooting
HALIFAX — The RCMP struggled to inform families promptly about the loss of their loved ones in the aftermath of the 2020 Nova Scotia mass shooting, with a single officer handling most cases amid an “astronomical” flow of information.
A document about the notification of next of kin released Monday by a public inquiry says that pleas for information from more than 100 family members poured in on the afternoon of April 19, 2020 and through the night, after police killed the murderer at an Enfield, N.S., gas station.
Relatives and friends who had seen images of burned homes on social media desperately sought official confirmation about the 22 people killed by the gunman driving a replica police car.
Harry and Cory Bond, the sons of Peter and Joy Bond — a couple murdered in Portapique, N.S. the night of April 18 — started hearing from acquaintances the next morning about shootings near Cobequid Court, the road where their parents lived.