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Gunman started Canada's worst mass shooting after his girlfriend fled

The gunman in Canada’s worst ever mass shooting began the weekend rampage that ultimately killed 22 people after his girlfriend escaped him when he assaulted her, a top police official said on Friday.

Police did not give details about the nature of the assault or how she escaped and fled into the woods. Local media said she had been tied up. The woman’s name was not provided. She is currently recovering from her injuries and cooperating with police.

“It was a significant assault, and this individual female did manage to escape, and that could very well have been the catalyst to start the chain of events,” Nova Scotia Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Superintendent Darren Campbell said in a news conference.

“However, we’re open to all possibilities and we’re not excluding the possibility that there was any premeditated planning also involved,” Campbell said in a news conference.

After the woman fled on Saturday night, she spent the night in hiding in the thick woods that surround the rural hamlet of Portapique, Nova Scotia, and only emerged on Sunday morning to call the 911 emergency number at about 6:30am.

By then the gunman, 51-year-old Gabriel Wortman, had killed 13 people in Portapique. Disguised in a police uniform and driving a fake police car, Wortman went on to kill nine more people on Sunday morning.

A message placed at a scroched guardrail support is seen at a makeshift memorial for Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Constable Heidi Stevenson.
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The Friday news conference provided the first detailed account of a shooting spree that lasted at least 13 hours. RCMP officers shot Wortman dead at a gas station about 90km from Portapique, but not before Wortman wounded one RCMP officer and killed another.

On Sunday, he also randomly killed one woman who was out for a Sunday morning walk, and he used the fake police cruiser to pull over and shoot and kill at least one person. He also stopped at the home of a woman he knew, murdered her, and took her car.

“I’ve been a police officer for almost 30 years now and I can’t imagine any more horrific a set of circumstances, when you’re trying to search for someone that looks like you,” Campbell said, referring to Wortman’s impersonation of an RCMP officer.

Unclear communication

Police faced criticism this week for using social media and not a provincial emergency alert system to notify the public that a gunman was at large, and for only sending out a tweet on Saturday night that warned of a “firearms complaint”.

Some of the families of the victims said better communication might have saved the lives of their loved ones.

Police believed the suspect had been “contained” within police perimeters on Saturday night, Campbell said. But he said the families “have every right to be angry. ... We are always looking to do better.”

A figurine of a female police officer is seen at a makeshift memorial for slain Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Constable Heidi Stevenson, who was one of the victims of Sunday's mass shooting, is seen in front of her detachment in Enfield, Nova Scotia, Canada April 22, 2020
 

On Friday evening after the earlier news conference, an alert was sent to all the cellphones in the province saying that police were responding to reports of shots fired in two different parts of a suburb of Halifax and advising people to stay inside their homes. It turned out to be a false alarm.

“All clear. ... No evidence of shots fired. Police continue to patrol the area,” the RCMP tweeted.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, speaking at a daily news conference, urged Canadians to join a virtual vigil at 6pm ET (6am Malaysian time).

“Let’s come together to support these communities that suffered immeasurable loss,” Trudeau said.

- Reuters

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