Second psychiatrist had worried Desmond was ‘falling through the cracks’
GUYSBOROUGH, N.S. — A psychiatrist who assessed Lionel Desmond two days before he fatally shot his family and himself says the former soldier showed no signs he was planning to hurt anyone when he arrived at the hospital in Antigonish, N.S., on Jan. 1, 2017.
Dr. Faisal Rahman, who has extensive experience treating veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder, told a fatality inquiry Tuesday that Desmond had come to the hospital because he was suffering from symptoms of the disorder after having an argument with his wife Shanna the night before.
“It just kept on escalating until next morning,” Rahman recalled Desmond telling him during a 30- to 40-minute interview at St. Martha’s Regional Hospital.
Desmond said the dispute was part of a long-standing pattern of conflict with his wife, which had included calls to police in the past, Rahman testified.