Regina Leader-Post

Aunt leery about review of fatal fall investigat­ion

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The aunt of a woman who died after falling 10 storeys down a hotel laundry chute says she’s grateful that RCMP are reviewing the Regina police department’s investigat­ion of the death.

But Delores Stevenson is also skeptical.

“I don’t have a whole lot of confidence within the justice system and police investigat­ing police, especially when there’s a lack of communicat­ion (between) the Regina police service and myself, and I’m sure this goes for other families,” Stevenson said at a news conference Monday.

Stevenson’s niece, Nadine Machiskini­c, was found at the bottom of the laundry chute at Regina’s Delta Hotel in January 2015.

An autopsy report said Machiskini­c died of blunt force trauma to the head, neck and trunk consistent with a fall. Blood tests also showed Machiskini­c had alcohol and a mix of methadone and three other drugs in her system, as well as high levels of sleeping medication.

The coroner ruled her death accidental, saying there was no evidence of foul play and no evidence of suicidal intent.

But Machiskini­c’s family has raised concerns that police did not take her death seriously.

They’ve questioned how she fit through the opening of the laundry chute, which was only 53 centimetre­s wide, and why it took police 60 hours to launch an investigat­ion.

Stevenson said it was presumed that Machiskini­c walked into the laundry room and passed out or overdosed.

Because she was Indigenous, Stevenson said it was assumed her life didn’t matter, her possession­s could be thrown away and “her case shouldn’t be treated as high importance by anybody from the emergency service, the coroner’s office, the Regina police, the Delta Hotel.

“I think everybody has a role to play in how this case was handled and the racism and stereotype­s that were built upon this investigat­ion,” she said.

A coroner’s inquest earlier this year heard that police made an error when they delayed sending toxicology samples for testing for several months.

The jury at the inquest ruled the cause of death as undetermin­ed and made just one recommenda­tion — that laundry chutes in hotels should always be kept locked and only ever be accessible to staff.

Brenda Dubois, an advocate for justice for First Nations who has done cultural training work with Regina police in the past, criticizes the way Machiskini­c’s case was handled.

“Her death was wrongful,” Dubois said at the news conference.

“The investigat­ion, I hate to say it, I think I’ve said it before, was a shoddy job.”

Regina police Chief Evan Bray said after the inquest in March that mistakes were made in the investigat­ion, but Bray said he’s confident in the police force’s findings.

Bray said from the start of the investigat­ion, officers faced challenges because paramedics didn’t believe police needed to be involved.

The RCMP review will look at how police handled the investigat­ion, but is “not a re-investigat­ion of the case,” Regina police spokeswoma­n Elizabeth Popowich said in an email last week.

 ?? MICHAEL BELL ?? Delores Stevenson said Monday that while she’s pleased the RCMP is looking into how Regina police handled the investigat­ion into the death of her niece, Nadine Machiskini­c, she wonders about one police force investigat­ing another. Machiskini­c was found...
MICHAEL BELL Delores Stevenson said Monday that while she’s pleased the RCMP is looking into how Regina police handled the investigat­ion into the death of her niece, Nadine Machiskini­c, she wonders about one police force investigat­ing another. Machiskini­c was found...

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