Cross-examination of N.S. killer’s spouse could promote conspiracy theories: lawyer
HALIFAX — The lawyer who represents the spouse of the man responsible for Canada’s worst mass shooting says there are good reasons why his client will not face cross-examination when she testifies at a public inquiry on Friday.
James Lockyer says Lisa Banfield should not be retraumatized by lawyers who he says seem determined to explore conspiracy theories about what happened on April 18-19, 2020, when a gunman in Nova Scotia killed 22 people during a 13-hour rampage.
The high-profile Toronto lawyer says some lawyers who represent victims’ families seem keen to ask Banfield how she managed to escape from her deranged partner and survive a bitterly cold night in the woods around Portapique, N.S.
Lockyer says the purpose of raising questions about Banfield’s whereabouts would be to challenge her credibility and suggest that she may have spent the night elsewhere.