Inquiry into deaths of Lionel Desmond and his family delayed after lawyer switch
GUYSBOROUGH, N.S. — Frustration and anger erupted on the first day of an inquiry into the tragic case of Lionel Desmond, an Afghan war veteran with PTSD who fatally shot his mother, wife and daughter before turning the gun on himself in early 2017.
With the third anniversary of the killings in Upper Big Tracadie, N.S., approaching, the fatality inquiry was supposed to hear from its first witness Monday, but the process stalled when one of the two families involved requested an adjournment.
As the hearing opened in a small municipal building in nearby Guysborough, N.S., the inquiry’s commissioner — provincial court Judge Warren Zimmer — confirmed that the parents of Desmond’s wife Shanna had replaced their lawyer last Friday.
Ricky and Thelma Borden’s new lawyer, Tom Macdonald, told Zimmer he needed time to review the files before the inquiry, which include more than 120,000 pages of evidence.