Nova Scotia mass shooter obsessed by spectre of pandemic disaster, violence
HALIFAX — The spectre of pandemic-fuelled social chaos and widespread looting appeared to haunt the Nova Scotia mass shooter a month before he carried out his killing rampage of April 18-19, 2020.
Twenty-two people — including a pregnant woman — were killed in the 13 hours of shootings and house burnings that began in Portapique, N.S., and carried on in several other communities the next morning.
Over the past year, a provincial court judge has been gradually releasing portions of witness statements used by police to obtain search warrants, with the latest disclosure on Wednesday evening.
In one of the court documents released, Ontario lawyer Kevin Von Bargen told police he was a friend of Gabriel Wortman’s and that shortly after the pandemic started in Nova Scotia, the killer became “convinced that the world economy was going to collapse.”