Spouse of N.S. gunman describes how he unravelled weeks before mass killing
CBC
In the weeks leading up to the Nova Scotia mass shooting that killed 22 people, the gunman drank excessive amounts of alcohol, buried hundreds of thousands in cash and made unusual comments about evading police and wanting to die, according to his spouse.
Lisa Banfield spent hours recounting her relationship and impressions of Gabriel Wortman to RCMP officers in the days after he went on his murderous rampage in April 2020. The couple had been celebrating their 19th anniversary on the night he first attacked her at their cottage in Portapique, then started randomly killing neighbours and strangers.
She repeatedly told police she believed he was hunting her down after she managed to escape from the replica police car where he had barricaded her to gather more weapons.
"I could hear him yelling my name, I think he was yelling my name and then I could hear him whistling, like, just weird," Banfield said in her police interview on April 20.
"And then all these bang, bang, bang and explosions, and it just seemed like it was getting closer to me."
Banfield described how she hid under a tree all night, too frightened to move. She knew first-hand what he was capable of doing.
While Banfield was still in hospital, she spoke at length with Staff Sgt. Greg Vardy about how her common-law spouse was a loner with few friends and he was "broken inside." It's one of three police interview transcripts released by the Mass Casualty Commission, which is the public inquiry looking into the context and circumstances of the tragedy.
In her statements, Banfield provided insight on her partner's fascination with police and his plans to evade them, in the event he would ever need to flee.
"He used to always want to talk about if he, you know, if 'I was gonna commit this crime, this is what I would do and I'd direct the police over here and I'd have something going on over here so that they wouldn't even know where I'm at'," she said.
Banfield said her partner never liked police, even though when he was younger he wanted to become a police officer. She said how she often pushed him to report his decommissioned cars to ensure they were legal, since they weren't registered or licensed. Banfield said he always assured her the replica car with decals and lights was for display only.
But then she described how he'd make comments about having the safest vehicle, if they ever had to leave town quickly. She said similar references were made about the radio system he purchased, and how he'd use it to be steps ahead of the police.
"I just, I thought nothing would come out of it, to be honest," Banfield said.
The shooter dressed in what looked like a police uniform and drove a mock RCMP cruiser across rural Nova Scotia, killing people in their homes, and others who crossed his path. He also set several homes, including the cottage he shared with Banfield, on fire.
It wasn't until Banfield emerged from the woods in Portapique around 6:30 a.m. on April 19 that RCMP officials say they realized he was in disguise and likely still on the move. The gunman went on to kill more people in the communities of Wentworth, Debert and Shubenacadie.