An inventory filed in December 2020 valued the property at more than $2.1 million. That included $120,000 the province paid to buy 200 Portapique Beach Rd., the former site of Wortman’s cottage and other buildings where the rampage began. A spokesman for the province said the purchase was made to ensure there would be no future development on the property. From that inventory, the gunman’s Dartmouth property, which was both his home and the site of his dental practice, was sold to a Dartmouth-based company, PA Developments. The public administrator completed the sale in March last year. Property records list the sale price at just over $1.5 million. A Dartmouth, NS-based company called PA Developments bought the former site of Gabriel Wortman’s dental technician business for just over $1.5 million last year. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC) In addition to the property, the estate inventory lists more than $880,000 in other financial holdings, including bank accounts and credit cards. The vast majority of that money, $705,000, is cash RCMP recovered when they searched the Portapique properties. The money was buried on the property and survived the fires that destroyed the buildings. The cash was delivered to the Public Trustee in June 2021. Obtaining an accurate financial picture of the property was complicated by the fact that Wortman used deceptive financial practices. During a search of Gabriel Wortman’s Portapique cottage, the RCMP discovered this metal ammunition container hidden underground under the deck, which contained cash. The money was in bundles of $100 bills that came to $705,000. (Mass Accident Commission) In his handwritten will, he named his longtime partner, Lisa Banfield, as sole beneficiary and executor of his estate. Banfield stepped down as executor, so the public trustee is managing the estate. However, she did not give up her claim to the estate itself. He has filed a lawsuit against the estate to try to secure a share of the money. But Banfield is not alone. The families of some of the murder victims have filed a lawsuit against the property. Lisa Banfield, the partner of the gunman who carried out the mass killing in Nova Scotia in April 2020, spoke before the Mass Casualty Commission on July 15. He is looking for a share of his fortune. (CBC) After the commencement of the legal action, the said action was subsequently amended in name Banfield, her brother and brother-in-law as respondents. The three were added to the lawsuit after being accused of supplying the gunman with ammunition. The charges against all three were sent to restorative justice and officially retired last month. As for the estate, a statement from the provincial Department of Justice said it remains in limbo over the lawsuits. “Until the claims are settled,” the statement reads in part, “debts or payments related to the property cannot proceed.”
title: “Estate Of Ns Mass Shooter In Limbo As Lawsuits Continue Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-10-22” author: “Brittany Townsend”
An inventory filed in December 2020 valued the property at more than $2.1 million. That included $120,000 the province paid to buy 200 Portapique Beach Rd., the former site of Wortman’s cottage and other buildings where the rampage began. A spokesman for the province said the purchase was made to ensure there would be no future development on the property. From that inventory, the gunman’s Dartmouth property, which was both his home and the site of his dental practice, was sold to a Dartmouth-based company, PA Developments. The public administrator completed the sale in March last year. Property records list the sale price at just over $1.5 million. A Dartmouth, NS-based company called PA Developments bought the former site of Gabriel Wortman’s dental technician business for just over $1.5 million last year. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC) In addition to the property, the estate inventory lists more than $880,000 in other financial holdings, including bank accounts and credit cards. The vast majority of that money, $705,000, is cash RCMP recovered when they searched the Portapique properties. The money was buried on the property and survived the fires that destroyed the buildings. The cash was delivered to the Public Trustee in June 2021. Obtaining an accurate financial picture of the property was complicated by the fact that Wortman used deceptive financial practices. During a search of Gabriel Wortman’s Portapique cottage, the RCMP discovered this metal ammunition container hidden underground under the deck, which contained cash. The money was in bundles of $100 bills that came to $705,000. (Mass Accident Commission) In his handwritten will, he named his longtime partner, Lisa Banfield, as sole beneficiary and executor of his estate. Banfield stepped down as executor, so the public trustee is managing the estate. However, she did not give up her claim to the estate itself. He has filed a lawsuit against the estate to try to secure a share of the money. But Banfield is not alone. The families of some of the murder victims have filed a lawsuit against the property. Lisa Banfield, the partner of the gunman who carried out the mass killing in Nova Scotia in April 2020, spoke before the Mass Casualty Commission on July 15. He is looking for a share of his fortune. (CBC) After the commencement of the legal action, the said action was subsequently amended in name Banfield, her brother and brother-in-law as respondents. The three were added to the lawsuit after being accused of supplying the gunman with ammunition. The charges against all three were sent to restorative justice and officially retired last month. As for the estate, a statement from the provincial Department of Justice said it remains in limbo over the lawsuits. “Until the claims are settled,” the statement reads in part, “debts or payments related to the property cannot proceed.”
title: “Estate Of Ns Mass Shooter In Limbo As Lawsuits Continue Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-02” author: “Andrew Martin”
An inventory filed in December 2020 valued the property at more than $2.1 million. That included $120,000 the province paid to buy 200 Portapique Beach Rd., the former site of Wortman’s cottage and other buildings where the rampage began. A spokesman for the province said the purchase was made to ensure there would be no future development on the property. From that inventory, the gunman’s Dartmouth property, which was both his home and the site of his dental practice, was sold to a Dartmouth-based company, PA Developments. The public administrator completed the sale in March last year. Property records list the sale price at just over $1.5 million. A Dartmouth, NS-based company called PA Developments bought the former site of Gabriel Wortman’s dental technician business for just over $1.5 million last year. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC) In addition to the property, the estate inventory lists more than $880,000 in other financial holdings, including bank accounts and credit cards. The vast majority of that money, $705,000, is cash RCMP recovered when they searched the Portapique properties. The money was buried on the property and survived the fires that destroyed the buildings. The cash was delivered to the Public Trustee in June 2021. Obtaining an accurate financial picture of the property was complicated by the fact that Wortman used deceptive financial practices. During a search of Gabriel Wortman’s Portapique cottage, the RCMP discovered this metal ammunition container hidden underground under the deck, which contained cash. The money was in bundles of $100 bills that came to $705,000. (Mass Accident Commission) In his handwritten will, he named his longtime partner, Lisa Banfield, as sole beneficiary and executor of his estate. Banfield stepped down as executor, so the public trustee is managing the estate. However, she did not give up her claim to the estate itself. He has filed a lawsuit against the estate to try to secure a share of the money. But Banfield is not alone. The families of some of the murder victims have filed a lawsuit against the property. Lisa Banfield, the partner of the gunman who carried out the mass killing in Nova Scotia in April 2020, spoke before the Mass Casualty Commission on July 15. He is looking for a share of his fortune. (CBC) After the commencement of the legal action, the said action was subsequently amended in name Banfield, her brother and brother-in-law as respondents. The three were added to the lawsuit after being accused of supplying the gunman with ammunition. The charges against all three were sent to restorative justice and officially retired last month. As for the estate, a statement from the provincial Department of Justice said it remains in limbo over the lawsuits. “Until the claims are settled,” the statement reads in part, “debts or payments related to the property cannot proceed.”
title: “Estate Of Ns Mass Shooter In Limbo As Lawsuits Continue Klmat” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-07” author: “Howard Hearne”
An inventory filed in December 2020 valued the property at more than $2.1 million. That included $120,000 the province paid to buy 200 Portapique Beach Rd., the former site of Wortman’s cottage and other buildings where the rampage began. A spokesman for the province said the purchase was made to ensure there would be no future development on the property. From that inventory, the gunman’s Dartmouth property, which was both his home and the site of his dental practice, was sold to a Dartmouth-based company, PA Developments. The public administrator completed the sale in March last year. Property records list the sale price at just over $1.5 million. A Dartmouth, NS-based company called PA Developments bought the former site of Gabriel Wortman’s dental technician business for just over $1.5 million last year. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC) In addition to the property, the estate inventory lists more than $880,000 in other financial holdings, including bank accounts and credit cards. The vast majority of that money, $705,000, is cash RCMP recovered when they searched the Portapique properties. The money was buried on the property and survived the fires that destroyed the buildings. The cash was delivered to the Public Trustee in June 2021. Obtaining an accurate financial picture of the property was complicated by the fact that Wortman used deceptive financial practices. During a search of Gabriel Wortman’s Portapique cottage, the RCMP discovered this metal ammunition container hidden underground under the deck, which contained cash. The money was in bundles of $100 bills that came to $705,000. (Mass Accident Commission) In his handwritten will, he named his longtime partner, Lisa Banfield, as sole beneficiary and executor of his estate. Banfield stepped down as executor, so the public trustee is managing the estate. However, she did not give up her claim to the estate itself. He has filed a lawsuit against the estate to try to secure a share of the money. But Banfield is not alone. The families of some of the murder victims have filed a lawsuit against the property. Lisa Banfield, the partner of the gunman who carried out the mass killing in Nova Scotia in April 2020, spoke before the Mass Casualty Commission on July 15. He is looking for a share of his fortune. (CBC) After the commencement of the legal action, the said action was subsequently amended in name Banfield, her brother and brother-in-law as respondents. The three were added to the lawsuit after being accused of supplying the gunman with ammunition. The charges against all three were sent to restorative justice and officially retired last month. As for the estate, a statement from the provincial Department of Justice said it remains in limbo over the lawsuits. “Until the claims are settled,” the statement reads in part, “debts or payments related to the property cannot proceed.”