As domestic violence death toll mounts in N.S., calls come to fund support agencies
HALIFAX — Experts on domestic violence say a series of deaths in Nova Scotia over the past three months highlight the need to improve funding for the programs that battle the root causes of intimate partner violence.
The latest deaths came on New Year’s Eve, as 39-year-old Matthew Costain allegedly shot and killed his girlfriend, 40-year-old Cora-Lee Smith, and her father, 73-year-old Bradley Downey, before being found dead from a self-inflicted gun wound.
Nova Scotia’s legislature declared domestic violence to be an “epidemic” in September, yet since then there have been four women murdered, along with Downey. All cases involve a perpetrator who died by suicide after allegedly killing their female partner.
Emma Halpern, the director of the Elizabeth Fry Society of Mainland Nova Scotia, said the deaths across the province are a clear sign that formal declarations must swiftly be followed by specific actions.