Prompt warning of N.S. killer’s replica car would have been ‘helpful’: senior Mountie
HALIFAX — A senior Mountie testified today that he would have liked to have seen a quicker warning to the public in 2020 that an active shooter in Nova Scotia was driving a replica RCMP cruiser.
Chief Supt. Darren Campbell made the comment during testimony before a public inquiry looking into the events of April 18-19, 2020, when a 51-year-old gunman drove the mock patrol car around the province, murdering 22 people.
He testified that the RCMP’s commander on the scene had complete authority to order that the information be made public and needed no approval from a superior such as Campbell.
The inquiry has heard that the commander delegated an officer to have communications staff alert the public about the replica vehicle shortly after 8 a.m. on April 19, but the tweet providing the information only went out at 10:17 a.m.