Doctor details how Lionel Desmond won approval to get a gun despite concerns
GUYSBOROUGH, N.S. — A New Brunswick doctor who uses cannabis to treat veterans with PTSD says Lionel Desmond wasn’t suicidal and showed no sign he was a threat to others in February 2016, less than a year before the former infantryman killed three members of his family and himself.
“He was very open with his feelings, and he had things to live for,” Dr. Paul Smith’s told a provincial fatality inquiry, which entered its fifth week of hearings Monday.
“His suicidal thinking had dropped dramatically.”
Smith’s testimony was considered pivotal to the inquiry because he was the one who signed off on a medical form that allowed Desmond to purchase the semi-automatic rifle he used in the killings on Jan. 3, 2017.