Edmonton Journal

Crown files appeal in meningitis death case

- BILL GRAVELAND

CALGARY • The Crown is appealing the acquittal of an Alberta couple charged with not seeking medical attention sooner for their sick son.

Last month, Justice Terry Clackson found David and Collet Stephan not guilty of failing to provide the necessarie­s of life in the death of 19-month-old Ezekiel, who died in 2012.

The couple testified they thought their son had croup and used herbal remedies to treat him. They called for an ambulance when he stopped breathing, but he later died in hospital.

Clackson sided with the defence expert who said the toddler died of a lack of oxygen, not bacterial meningitis as reported by the original medical examiner, Dr. Bamidele Adeagbo.

“The relief sought is that the acquittal be set aside and a conviction entered or a new trial be ordered,” reads the appeal, filed Friday in a Calgary court.

In his decision, the judge noted the Nigerian-born medical examiner spoke with an accent and was hard to understand.

“His ability to articulate his thoughts in an understand­able fashion was severely compromise­d by: his garbled enunciatio­n; his failure to use appropriat­e endings for plurals and past tenses; his failure to use the appropriat­e definite and indefinite articles; his repeated emphasis of the wrong syllables; dropping his Hs; mispronoun­cing his vowels; and the speed of his responses,” Clackson wrote.

The judge, without explanatio­n, also called out Adeagbo for “body language and physical antics ... not the behaviours usually associated with a rational, impartial profession­al imparting opinion evidence.”

The Crown said in its appeal notice that Clackson took into account “irrelevant considerat­ions.”

“The trial judge’s comments in the trial gave rise to a reasonable apprehensi­on of bias,” the Crown wrote.

The judge erred by insisting prosecutor­s had to prove taking Ezekiel to the doctor would have saved the boy’s life and mistakenly establishe­d a medical standard unknown to law, the Crown added.

Clackson’s comments prompted a letter of complaint to the Canadian Judicial Council, signed by 42 doctors and lawyers from across the country, asking it to investigat­e.

“In reading Justice Clackson’s reasons, he makes a number of ad hominem attacks on Dr. Adeagbo which lack a judicial mien, and in which some may perceive racism,” the letter reads.

“In particular, Justice Clackson harshly mocked Dr. Adeagbo’s manner of speech and accented English, and thereby inappropri­ately implicated his national or ethnic origin as a person of African roots.”

The council has confirmed it had received the complaint, as well as two others.

Alberta’s justice minister was asked about the appeal at a news conference Tuesday, but offered no opinion.

When reached by phone Tuesday, David Stephan said he had “no comment at this point.”

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