Mounties who shot at fellow officer, civilian during N.S. mass shooting cleared
HALIFAX — Just before two RCMP officers opened fire on a fellow officer and a civilian during last year’s Nova Scotia mass shooting, they struggled with congested radio channels and mistook a man wearing a bright vest for the killer.
These are among the fresh facts revealed Tuesday in a police watchdog agency report clearing the Mounties of criminal wrongdoing after they fired five shots with high-powered rifles outside the Onslow, N.S., firehall.
The six-page report by the Serious Incident Response Team says the “totality of the evidence” prompted the officers to believe the killer was standing just 88 metres away from them on the morning of April 19.
“They discharged their weapons in order to prevent further deaths or serious injuries …. The (officers) had reasonable grounds to believe the person they saw, who was disobeying their orders, was the mass murderer who had, in the preceding hour, killed three more persons,” it concludes.