Victims’ families boycott N.S. mass shooting inquiry over questioning of Mounties
TRURO, N.S. — Family members of victims of the 2020 Nova Scotia mass shooting have told their lawyers to boycott a public inquiry after a decision preventing cross-examination of key Mountie witnesses.
The law firm representing 14 of 22 families issued a statement saying it’s been instructed not to attend at least the next four hearings, beginning today.
The post from Patterson Law says the families are “disheartened and further traumatized” by a decision from the commission Monday that prevents their lawyers from directly questioning Staff Sgt. Brian Rehill and Sgt. Andy O’Brien.
Rehill was the RCMP’s risk manager at its Operational Communications Centre in Truro, N.S., when the rampage that claimed 22 lives over two days began in nearby Portapique on April 18, 2020.