Wednesday, May 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Desmond Inquiry Judge Says Veterans Affairs Did Not Share Key Information

The Canadian Press, 13 Feb, 2020 09:06 PM

    GUYSBOROUGH, N.S. - The judge overseeing an inquiry into a triple-murder and suicide carried out by an Afghanistan war veteran says Lionel Desmond faced a large gap in treatment for a severe case of post-traumatic stress disorder.

     

    Provincial court Judge Warren Zimmer also told the inquiry that Veterans Affairs Canada did not share key information about Desmond's mental illnesses with the last health professional to talk to the former sniper before he killed his family and himself inside their rural Nova Scotia home in January 2017.

     

    Zimmer said the fatality inquiry has heard evidence that after Desmond was discharged from a residential treatment facility in Quebec in August 2016, he received no actual therapeutic treatment before the killings four months later.

     

    The inquiry has heard that Desmond sought help through a Nova Scotia hospital's emergency room on two occasions before he managed to meet in November 2016 with a community-based psychotherapist in Antigonish, N.S., contracted by Veterans Affairs.

     

    Catherine Chambers, a therapist who specializes in treating PTSD, told the inquiry she had been in touch with Desmond's case manager at Veterans Affairs, but never received any medical documents from the department.

     

    Zimmer read from Veterans Affairs reports indicating Desmond had not responded well to the treatment at the Quebec facility, and that the former infantryman could be suffering from cognitive impairments that required a sophisticated neuropsychological assessment.

     

    "I want you to have an appreciation for what was known at the time that he was discharged and was coming to you," Zimmer told Chambers. "It's important to appreciate that all of this information was sitting there, and you had none of it."

     

    Zimmer then cited testimony from a psychiatrist in Antigonish who said in a Dec. 2, 2016, report that it appeared Desmond was "falling through the cracks in terms of follow-up by military and veterans programs."

     

    "The information would have been valuable for you to know," Zimmer told Chambers, "that the person who's coming to see you had, by the view of Dr. Slayter, 'fallen through the cracks?'"

     

    Chambers agreed, saying the recommendation that Desmond receive a neuropsychological assessment for cognitive problems meant he wasn't a good fit for community-based psychotherapy.

     

    Zimmer responded: "You were given no heads up that (a neuropsychological assessment) was an important part of what was being recommended. Without cognitive wellness, your interventions are going to be frustrated?"

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Slow Down Ordered After Second Train Carrying Oil Derails Near Saskatchewan Town

    Slow Down Ordered After Second Train Carrying Oil Derails Near Saskatchewan Town
    GUERNSEY, Sask. - The federal government ordered lower speed limits for all trains carrying large amounts of dangerous goods Thursday, hours after a fiery derailment in rural Saskatchewan sent thick black smoke into the air.    

    Slow Down Ordered After Second Train Carrying Oil Derails Near Saskatchewan Town

    Experts Urge Trudeau To Use African Trip To Reset Relationship

    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is on his way to Africa tonight where he will become the first Canadian prime minister to participate in a session of the African Union.    

    Experts Urge Trudeau To Use African Trip To Reset Relationship

    B.C. RCMP Exclusion Zone Set At Coastal Gaslink Site, Protesters Report Arrests

    SMITHERS, B.C. - Opponents of a natural gas pipeline being built across northwestern British Columbia say RCMP have begun enforcing an injunction that prevents interference with construction.    

    B.C. RCMP Exclusion Zone Set At Coastal Gaslink Site, Protesters Report Arrests

    Chinese Envoy Lauds Virus Co-Operation With Canada, Amid Chill In Relationship

    Chinese Envoy Lauds Virus Co-Operation With Canada, Amid Chill In Relationship
    Ambassador Cong Peiwu tells The Canadian Press that anything Canada can do in the next few weeks will be appreciated, as the two countries try to address their problems and get their relationship back on track.    

    Chinese Envoy Lauds Virus Co-Operation With Canada, Amid Chill In Relationship

    Charter Plane Carrying Canadian Citizens Takes Off From Wuhan For Canada

    Charter Plane Carrying Canadian Citizens Takes Off From Wuhan For Canada
    OTTAWA - A charter plane carrying Canadian citizens home from the centre of the global novel coronavirus outbreak has begun its journey home.    

    Charter Plane Carrying Canadian Citizens Takes Off From Wuhan For Canada

    Canadians Coming back from CoronaVirus Infected Wuhan | Sexual Assualt At a Massage Clinic in Surrey

    A BC couple confirmed positive for the CoronaVirus on a cruise in Japan and Canada charters second flight out of Wuhan

    Canadians Coming back from CoronaVirus Infected Wuhan | Sexual Assualt At a Massage Clinic in Surrey