Tuesday, December 23, 2025
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

    Bhupinderpal Gill And Gurpreet Ronald Win Appeal: Will Face New Trial For Murder Of Jagtar Gill

    Bhupinderpal Gill And Gurpreet Ronald Win Appeal: Will Face New Trial For Murder Of Jagtar Gill
    Ottawa Resident Jagtar Gill Was Found Dead In January 2014 On Her 17th Wedding Anniversary

    Bhupinderpal Gill And Gurpreet Ronald Win Appeal: Will Face New Trial For Murder Of Jagtar Gill

    Bill To Ratify New North American Trade Deal Coming In Short Order: Trudeau

    The Liberal government's minority status in the House of Commons means the party must find support from across the political aisle to implement the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement.

    Bill To Ratify New North American Trade Deal Coming In Short Order: Trudeau

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Cat lovers across Atlantic Canada are rallying to save feral felines in a Newfoundland town that will soon be abandoned, as the provincial government backs down from a plan to euthanize the animals.    

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town

    Ottawa Accepts New Brunswick's Carbon-Tax Proposal

    OTTAWA - New Brunswick consumers will get a break at the gas pumps come April, after the federal government approved the province's carbon-tax proposal Wednesday.    

    Ottawa Accepts New Brunswick's Carbon-Tax Proposal

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers
    A national agriculture group says farming needs to change to help save the climate and the industry.    

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home
    OTTAWA - Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne is raising the case of a Canadian man detained in Cairo with the Egyptian government today.

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home