After multiple delays, public hearings finally begin next week as part of the inquiry into the largest mass shooting in Canadian history. From 10 p.m. on April 18, 2020, well into the next day, a man disguised as a Mountie stalked across nearly 200 kilometres of rural Nova Scotia shooting neighbours, strangers, acquaintances and torching houses. He ultimately killed 22 people. \n\nOne survivor of the rampage was Lisa Banfield, the killer\u2019s common-law spouse, who \u2014 along with her brother and brother-in-law \u2014 has since been criminally charged with supplying the shooter with ammunition. Now, the brother-in-law\u2019s lawyer says the charge against his client is \u201can effort to distract attention away from the incompetence of the RCMP.\u201d \n\nToday, CBC Nova Scotia reporter Elizabeth McMillan is here to discuss those charges, which will soon be going to trial, and the looming inquiry, which some families are worried will continue to keep them in the dark.