Desmond inquiry: forensic psychiatrist describes inadequate plans for former soldier
PORT HAWKESBURY, N.S. — An inquiry investigating why a former soldier killed three family members and himself in 2017 heard testimony Monday from a psychiatrist who said Lionel Desmond had an inadequate discharge plan when he left a psychiatric hospital in August 2016.
Dr. Scott Theriault, who works at the East Coast Forensic Hospital in Dartmouth, N.S., was asked by the provincial fatality inquiry to complete a psychological autopsy on the former infantryman from Nova Scotia.
Theriault told the inquiry that Desmond was not psychologically stabilized when he left a residential treatment program at Ste. Anne’s Hospital in Montreal, which specializes in treating veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and other operational stress injuries.
Desmond, a former rifleman with the 2nd Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment, had served in Afghanistan in 2007 and was diagnosed with PTSD in 2011. He was medically discharged in June 2015 and was in the process of moving from Canadian Forces Base Gagetown in central New Brunswick to rural Nova Scotia when he was sent to the Montreal hospital.


