Regina Leader-Post

Inmate’s family not sent letter of sympathy

- THIA JAMES tjames@postmedia.com

SASKATOON Correction­al Service Canada (CSC) says it did not send a formal letter to the family of Christophe­r Van Camp after he was killed at the Saskatchew­an Penitentia­ry in June.

In emailed statements to the Saskatoon StarPhoeni­x, CSC spokeswoma­n Veronique Rioux said the federal agency put a “process” in place as of Sept. 13 to ensure that a letter is used to send condolence­s to inmates’ next of kin. A commission­er’s bulletin dated Aug. 28 included a formal policy for CSC staff handling funeral arrangemen­ts, communicat­ions and an inmate’s finances when the inmate dies in custody.

Van Camp, 37, was pronounced dead on June 7 after he was found unresponsi­ve in his cell at the Prince Albert prison. Emergency responders who were called to the prison were unable to revive him. He had been serving a sentence of five years, five months and 12 days for armed robbery, fraud, theft and breaking and entering.

He had been paroled in the spring, but subsequent­ly returned to custody for a breach of conditions stemming from an accidental drug overdose that left him in a coma for five days.

His cellmate, Tyler Vandewater, faces a seconddegr­ee murder charge in connection with his death.

An internal investigat­ion CSC launched on July 31 is expected to be finalized next month, but it appears the CSC won’t automatica­lly share the findings with Van Camp’s family — they’ll need to file a freedom of informatio­n request because the report will contain third-party informatio­n.

“The next of kin will be provided with informatio­n on how to access the investigat­ion report through CSC’s Access to Informatio­n and Privacy,” Rioux wrote in an email.

“We are committed to learning all we can to ensure that future deaths can be prevented,” she wrote.

The CSC won’t answer specific questions about the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Van Camp’s death. Rioux said it would be “inappropri­ate” to comment about whether he was evaluated and cleared by a prison health profession­al before he was returned to the general prison population.

The CSC also won’t comment about the litigation it cites as the reason why it won’t answer those questions: a lawsuit filed by Van Camp’s mother, Lauren Laithwaite.

Federal inmates are assessed by a nurse within 24 hours of admission to custody, Rioux wrote. They are then listed to see a physician based on need, and if there’s a need, the doctor will evaluate them within 72 hours. Inmates also receive mental health screening within 24 hours of admission and their mental health status is evaluated within two weeks, she wrote.

According to the CSC, three of the 62 “critical and serious” incidents at all federal institutio­ns this fiscal year happened at the Saskatchew­an Penitentia­ry.

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