Minister says scheduling snafus stalling Desmond inquiry, but lawyer isn’t so sure
HALIFAX — Nova Scotia’s justice minister says scheduling snafus are getting in the way of restarting the high-profile inquiry investigating why former soldier Lionel Desmond killed his family and himself in January 2017.
But a lawyer who represents one of Desmond’s sisters says scheduling is not the problem.
Adam Rodgers says a Crown attorney told him time had been set aside for hearings in November and December at the courthouse in Port Hawkesbury, N.S., where there is room to accommodate physical distancing protocols.
The hearings inside a small municipal building in nearby Guysborough, N.S., have been on hold since March 2.