False sightings, reports of gunfire: Court documents reveal details of RCMP response in Portapique - Action News
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Nova Scotia

False sightings, reports of gunfire: Court documents reveal details of RCMP response in Portapique

The affidavit filed last week is the first time RCMP have elaborated on exactly what officers did in the early hours after the first Mountie arrived on scene of the mass shooting in Portapique, N.S., following the initial 911 call on April 18, 2020.

Initial RCMP actions outlined in affidavit filed in response to lawsuit launched by families of victims

RCMP first warned other police forces in Nova Scotia that the suspect in the mass shooting should be considered 'armed and dangerous' at 1:07 a.m. AT on April 19, 2020, through a Be On the Lookout (BOLO) bulletin. They tweeted a photo of the gunman's replica car at 10:17 a.m. AT. (Photo Illustration/CBC News)

The first RCMP officers to arrive inPortapique, N.S., during last year's shooting rampage thought they had spotted the gunman, but learned hours later it was a terrified man fleeing through the nighttime woods after discovering his brother gunned down near one of the tiny community's unpaved roads.

Themix-up is one of several new details of the confusion at the scene outlined in an RCMP affidavit quietly filed last week in a Halifax court as part of the defence in a class-action lawsuit launched against the force by many of the victims' families.

The affidavit is the first time the RCMP has elaborated on exactly what police did in those early hours after the first officer arrived at the intersection of Portapique Beach Road and Highway 2, about 25 minutes followingthe initial 911 call on April 18, 2020.

The documents show officers on the ground reported hearing gunfire for hours, though police later determined the shooter had left the area via a back road,about 20 minutes after the first officer arrived.One witness also told police shortly before midnight there could be more than one shooter.

Gabriel Wortman, a 51-year-old denturist, killed 22 acquaintances and strangers over 13 hours in Portapique and several rural communities in Nova Scotia before being shot dead by policeat a gas station north of Halifax on April 19, 2020.

Families of nearly all thosekilled are part of a proposed class-action lawsuit against the RCMP and the Nova Scotia government.It alleges RCMPfailed to contain the shooter in Portapique and sent too few officers to respond. It also covers a range of criticisms previously raised about the tragedy, including communication with the public, roadblocksand notification of families.

The proposed class action has not yet been certified and the claims have not yet been tested in court.

Twenty-two people died on April 18 and 19. Top row from left: Gina Goulet, Dawn Gulenchyn, Jolene Oliver, Frank Gulenchyn, Sean McLeod, Alanna Jenkins. Second row: John Zahl, Lisa McCully, Joey Webber, Heidi Stevenson, Heather O'Brien and Jamie Blair. Third row from top: Kristen Beaton, Lillian Campbell, Joanne Thomas, Peter Bond, Tom Bagley and Greg Blair. Bottom row: Emily Tuck, Joy Bond, Corrie Ellison and Aaron Tuck. (CBC)

The nine-page affidavit sworn by Supt. Darren Campbell is the only detailed timeline the RCMP has released since the week of the shootings when he described how the gunman moved through several communities disguised as a Mountiein a vehicle nearly identical to actual cruisers.

The affidavit also states that Campbell believed the gunman intended to kill at least five more people, including the sister of his common-law spouse, Lisa Banfield, and that it was ultimately Banfield's family who shared the photo of the replica RCMP cruiser.

3 officers entered Portapique on foot

The court documents don't pinpoint when police identified their suspect, but notethe first person who called 911 relayed that her husband had been shot by a neighbour,a denturist, who drove police cars.

The first officer on the scene also spoke with a man who was shot in the arm while driving and who identified the gunman by name as his neighbour and said he drove police cars.

Campbell statedone officer stayed at a roadblock set up at the intersection to the subdivision with a man who had been shot. Two officers initiallyentered the community on footand were joined shortly by a third.

RCMP initially set up a roadblock on Highway 2 at the entrance to Portapique Beach Road shortly after arriving on April 18, 2020. Within two and a half hours, police say they had set up four roadblocks on the rural highway, the only way in and out of Portapique. (Jonathan Villeneuve/Radio-Canada)

Meanwhile, callsfor backup went out starting at 10:35 p.m. AT, at which point four RCMP units were on scene.

Within minutes, Campbellsaid, the senior officer at the RCMP communications centre alerted senior management in the district, who activated the force'scritical incident program with requests for the provincial tactical team, dog handlersand seven additional units to head toColchester County where several homes were burning.

Officers thought they heard gunfire

By 11 p.m., the three RCMP officers walking along the unpaved roads of the subdivision discovered a burning Ford Taurus,a building in flamesand a lifeless body. They thought they saw their suspect approaching whenthe beam of a flashlight broke through the darkness.

But the documents state the light disappeared, andofficers thought the man had bolted into the woods.

In an affidavit, Supt. Darren Campbell described a timeline of police actions on April 18 and 19, 2020. (CBC News)

They also thought they could hear gunfire. Campbell statedRCMP members reported hearing it at least six different times between 10:35 p.m. and 2:50 a.m.

Around 11:55 p.m., a witness told the Mounties there might be multiple shooters. The affidavit does notsay who reported the information or on what basis.

Previous encounter withgunman

CBCNews previously reported RCMPknocked on some doors and ordered residents to leave, but othersslept through the night. There are only about 50 homes in the community, and someare seasonal cottages.

The RCMP affidavit said staff at the communications centre in Truro, N.S., were trying to callnumbers associated with addresses in the community to advise people to shelter in place. It's not clear how many people were alerted.

It's also not clear how many RCMP officers were on the ground in Portapique overnight, though 23 units had arrived on scene bymidnight. Units often refer to police vehicles, which cancarry more than one person.

Campbell oversees the RCMP's critical incident response program in Nova Scotia. He stated in court documents that he was alerted to a problem in Portapique, N.S., on April 18, 2020, around 10:46 p.m. AT, about 20 minutes after officers first arrived in the community and 45 minutes after the first 911 call. (Robert Guertin/CBC)

Members of the RCMP's emergency response team, dispatched fromDartmouth, arrived in Portapique at 12:49 a.m., according to the documents.

CBCNews previously reported it was around that time that officers rescued four childrenhiding in the basement of a home after their parents were killed.

Part of thetactical team's role was to startlooking for the gunman using thermal imaging and police dogs.

One of the officers respondingovernight had encountered the gunman before, when RCMP ticketedhim for speeding in February2020.

"When witnesses described that the gunman was driving a car resemblinga police cruiser, the member recalled the traffic stop, and circulated the photograph of the gunman's licence, speed and the rear of his Ford Taurus vehicle," the documents state.

Cruiser photo sent by gunman's in-laws

Search warrant documents later prepared by the RCMP state thatWortman was not driving the 2017 Ford Taurus he used in the shootings when he was pulled over three months before the rampage.

He was behind the wheel of one of the three other decommissioned police vehicles he'd bought through federal government auctions.

Police block the highway in Debert, N.S., on Sunday, April 19, 2020. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

Early on April 19, 2020, police were still trying to track downvehicles he owned. They enlisted the Halifax Regional Police to search hisDartmouth home, where they reported finding a former police vehicle covered in snow around 2 a.m. Two others were burning in Portapique.

Court documents state police didn't obtain a photo of the gunman's vehicle with nearly identical RCMP decals until 7:22 a.m., when one of Banfield's relatives shared it.

Minutes later, officers in Portapique determined there were no guns in either of the two burning decommissioned cruisers.

Several false alarms

By 1 a.m. on April 19, 2020, Campbell said RCMP had set up four roadblocks on Highway 2the lone highway leadingin and out of Portapique.

Around 2:20 a.m., officers located the man in the woods and determined he wasn't a threat. While Clinton Ellisonwasn't named in the court documents, hespoke to CBC News in April 2020 about his ordeal.

WATCH | Victim's brother recallsnight of the shooting:

"A nightmare through hell": Victim's brother recalls night of mass shooting

4 years ago
Duration 7:05
Warning: This clip contains disturbing details. Clinton Ellison says he hid in the woods for hours after discovering his brother's body the night of the mass shooting in Portapique, N.S. He had gone looking for his brother, Corrie Ellison, when he failed to return from checking on a nearby fire.

Ellison wasn't the only possible sighting of the suspect that day. Court documentsshow that three timesat 1:24 a.m., 3:23 a.m., and around 8:30 a.m.police were called to investigate suspicious activityoutside the subdivision in Portapique where the killings occurred. Allwere false alarms, but it took about half an hour each time to determine there was no threat.

That morning, afterpolice respondedto reports of people killed in Debert and Wentworth, and RCMP tweeted the photo of the replica cruiser, someone reported seeing the vehicle near Stewiacke, heading south. Someone else reported seeing iton Highway 101near Sackville. Police also descended on a Sobeys in Lower Truro after a sighting there.

Gunman on the move again

Shortly after 9:30 a.m.,someone reported that an RCMP vehicle was leaving the highway in Wentworth where a woman was found dead.

"Within minutes, multiple callers reported a house fire in Wentworth, further north," the documents state, noting that though people heard gunshots in the area earlier, they didn't call for help until noticing a home burning.

Things happened quickly after that. Campbell said the emergency response team from Halifax and one from Moncton, N.B., arrived around 9 a.m., after having been called the night before, and started trying to catch up with the gunman.

The documents don't mention the gunman stopped at a Petro-Canada in Elmsdale, N.S., before driving a car stolen from one of his victimsto a gas station in nearby Enfield, N.S., where he was shot and killed by police.

No helicopter available, hundreds of 911 calls

The documents also layout some of the challenges police faced.

The RCMP helicopter police requested from Moncton, N.B., at 11:10 p.m. on April 18, 2020,was grounded for maintenance. Separate documents obtained by CBCNews through freedom of information laws showed RCMP requested a helicopter from the provincial Department of Lands and Forestryaround 6 a.m.It wasn't equipped to fly at night.

Amid their manhunt on April 19, 2020, Nova Scotia RCMP tweeted this picture of the mock police vehicle used in the shootings. The tweet said, 'There's one difference between [the suspect's] car and our RCMP vehicles: the car number.' (Nova Scotia RCMP)

The affidavit said over the 13-hour manhunt, the RCMP Operational Communications Centre answered 480 calls, with about 60 per centrelated to the shootings. Emergency dispatchers were not able to answer 74 calls.

Campbellalso addressed why police didn't send anemergency alert noting it had never before been done in Canada in response to an active shooter, though he said officials planned to send oneshortly before the gunmanwas killed.

Twitter was used to communicate, the documents said, based on past experiences, including the 2014 shootings in Moncton, N.B., where three RCMP officers were killed.

"Social media posts and 'tweets' have been considered an effective way to communicate quickly with the public. This determination has been made based on the direct access to social media by the police, and the fact that RCMP social media is monitored by and rebroadcast or reported on by news media," Campbell said in the affidavit.

The remains of one of the gunman's decommissioned police cruisers at the property where his cottage once stood. Court documents show police discovered two former cruisers burning and determined there were no guns in them around 7:30 a.m. AT on April 19, 2020. (Steve Lawrence/CBC)

A joint federal and provincial inquiry is looking at the cause, context and events during the massacre, includinghow police and various federal and provincial agencies responded. It will also examine intimate partner violence andthe gunman's access to firearms.

Public proceedings are scheduled to begin Oct. 26, 2021, and a final report is expected in November 2022.

WATCH | The Fifth Estate chroncles the 13 deadly hours of the Nova Scotia shooting:

Thirteen Deadly Hours: The Nova Scotia Shooting

4 years ago
Duration 45:10
The Fifth Estate presents a comprehensive inquiry into this year's mass shooting in Nova Scotia, chronicling 13 hours of mayhem that constitute one of Canada's deadliest events. [Correction: In the video, we incorrectly said officers jumped out of a cruiser outside the Onslow fire hall and began firing. In fact, the person who was interviewed said it was not a cruiser and she believed it was a Hyundai. Nova Scotia's Serious Incident Response Team has since found that it was an unmarked police vehicle.]