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Nova ScotiaDAY 13 OF INQUIRY

Why firearms officers returned Lionel Desmond's gun licence after suicide attempt, police calls

A firearms officer who reviewed Lionel Desmond's gun licence after a suicide attempt explained how the Afghanistan veteran with complex mental illness was able to get the licence back.

Desmond used licence to buy semi-automatic rifle the same day he killed wife, daughter and mother

A fatality inquiry heard Thursday about how Lionel Desmond was able to retain a gun licence despite his history of police calls and mental illness. (Dave Irish/CBC)

Lionel Desmond's firearms licence first got flagged for review after a reference revealedthe Afghanistan veteran hadomittedhis diagnosis of complex post-traumatic stress disorder from his application.

But despite that omission and an attempt at suicide a year later Desmond got that licence back, passing two separate firearms reviews at different times, according to testimony from New Brunswick's acting chief firearms officer at a fatality inquiry underway in Guysborough, N.S.

Desmond used that licence again on Jan. 3, 2017.He bought a Soviet-style semi-automatic rifle, parked his truck on a logging road behind his wife Shanna's family home in Upper Big Tracadie, N.S., and then fatally shot her, their 10-year-old daughter Aaliyah, and his mother, Brenda.

The former soldier then shot himself in the head.

Even as the focus of the fatality inquiry has shifted this week from mental health care to how Desmond was able to acquire firearms, the two issues are inextricably linked.

In November 2014 and February 2016, two doctors described the veteran as stable and non-suicidal. By May 2016,Desmond was sent to an in-patient psychiatric facility in Montreal for veterans with PTSD.

During that time, the RCMP came out to check on Desmond at least four times at his home in New Brunswick and where his wife was living in Nova Scotia.

Several of her calls to police described her husband as manic, following bouts of yelling and throwing of furniture, according to evidence. And on Nov. 27, 2015, in Oromocto, N.B., she called police to report that Desmond had said his goodbyes, had cut his leg and was going to commit suicide.

But the doctors' reports arewhat prompted the firearms office to validate Desmond's licence, firearms officer Lysa Rossignol testified onThursday.

Framed photos of Shanna and 10-year-old Aaliyah Desmond are displayed in the Borden family home, where they were killed on Jan. 3, 2017. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC)

Upon hearing that, Judge Warren Zimmersignalled a recommendation that could come fromthis inquiry: that firearms applicants who report a history of complex mental illness submit another medical review partway through the five-year renewal period.

Zimmer suggested a more proactive approach could save lives, instead of waiting for a family member, doctor or police officer to contact firearms officials about their concerns.

"I would say it this way: stability doesn't necessarily maintain forever," he told the witness. "If you have to wait for five years to go back and do a check, there might be a better way to do it."

CBCNews has obtained the assessment completed by Dr. Paul Smith, which described Lionel Desmond as "non-suicidal and stable" and said that he had "no concerns for firearms usage" in February 2016.

Judge wearing robes is seen presiding over an inquiry.
Judge Warren Zimmer is presiding over the Desmond inquiry in Guysborough, N.S. (Nova Scotia Courts)

Medical clearance

It's unclear exactly when Desmond first began seeing Smith, a Fredericton doctor who switched him from his previous medication to medicinal cannabis.

A prescription dated Oct. 1, 2015, signed by Smith marks one of the earliest pieces of evidence of their clinical relationship. That's roughly five months before he signed off on Desmond's firearms review.

Typically, the firearms office will only accept a medical form from a clinician who has known the patient "for some time," Rossignol testified. When pressed, she didn't specify exactly how long that needed to be.

Dr. Vinod Joshi, apsychiatrist assigned to Desmond while he was in the military, had signed off on an earlier reviewin November 2014 when the soldier was trying to renew his licence and upgrade it to include restricted firearms like handguns and other weapons.

He'd worked with Desmond for at least three years, according to Rossignol's testimony.

And he described his patient as medicated, having shown neither signs of psychosis or suicidal ideation.

Joshi wrote that he saw no issue with renewing the licence Desmondfirst received in 2008.

But the area firearms officer who'd been assigned the soldier's review did have other questions: he wanted to know why Desmond hadn'tbeen truthfulon his application about his mental health.

Desmond's firearms licence twice came up for review, but was cleared both times. (Facebook/The Canadian Press)

Joe Roper spoke with the soldier on the phone. He said Desmond told himhe filled out the application with his wife and that neither thought his illness was relevant.

A military psychiatrist diagnosed Desmond with PTSD in 2011, although he began showing symptoms soon after he returned from a seven-month tour in Afghanistan in August 2007.

The memories of that tour haunted him: having to retrieve bodies on landmine-pocked roads, with the sound of gunfire and screaming punctuating the night, witnesses have told the inquiry.

He came home a changed man, his family has said.

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