RCMP supervisor during N.S. mass shooting took extended leave amid second-guessing
HALIFAX — One of the Mounties who oversaw the initial response to the mass shooting in Nova Scotia was off work for at least 16 months afterwards, saying he struggled with questions about his own decisions during the rampage.
Staff Sgt. Brian Rehill — a risk manager at the RCMP’s Operational Communications Centre in Truro, N.S. — told investigators with the public inquiry investigating the killings that support from other officers helped him cope with the aftermath.
However, he was still off work at the time of his interview on Jan. 15. “I’m a bit rusty because I haven’t worked since September 2020,” he said. The inquiry removed the reasons behind Rehill’s absence from the transcript of the interview, saying it was “personal information.”
In the remaining document, the 32-year-veteran of the force describes a career that began in a small town on Newfoundland’s Great Northern Peninsula and included rural policing assignments in Cape Breton and northeastern Nova Scotia.