The Guardian (Charlottetown)

No foul play

Family of Mary Francis Paul finally gets answers to Aboriginal woman’s 1977 Charlottet­own death

- BY JIM DAY

The true details surroundin­g the death of an Aboriginal woman in Charlottet­own in 1977 took far too long to get to family members who for years wrongly feared foul play and failed justice, says Charlottet­own Police Deputy Chief Brad MacConnell.

A meeting took place last Friday in response to family seeking answers to the death of Mary Francis Paul near the capital city’s waterfront four decades ago.

Barbara Bernard and her granddaugh­ter spoke before the National Inquiry on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls earlier this month in Moncton.

They said they knew few details about Paul’s death and wanted to know if police investigat­ed.

Bernard told the inquiry she was only 16 at the time of her mother’s death, and police never gave her any details.

She only discovered 12 years later that the death may have been suspicious, and the body might have been dumped in a metal bin.

On Friday, Bernard, her daughter and her grandchild­ren met with MacConnell, Susan Maynard, provincial manager of Victim Services with the Department of Justice and Public Safety, and the officer who responded to the call to Paul’s death in 1977.

MacConnell says police were able to set the record straight.

“It was a really positive meeting,’’ he says.

“It’s just unfortunat­e it took so long to give them the accurate account of exactly what happened.’’

MacConnell says Bernard and family members were provided misinforma­tion over the years, such as that Paul’s neck was broken and that the body was found in a metal drum.

“That wasn’t the case,’’ he says.

“And I think the Bernard family was relieved to hear that.’’

The autopsy report, notes MacConnell, concludes Paul died due to acute alcoholism, aspiration by vomit and exposure on an October evening near the city’s waterfront.

Police believe Paul was sitting on a brick window well and, due to high intoxicati­on, fell backwards into the well where her body was found.

MacConnell says the family members became very emotional, particular­ly Bernard, when taken to the site of Paul’s death.

“You could tell the hurt was still there 40 years later,’’ he says.

Still, MacConnell feels the family was satisfied with what police had to tell them concerning the circumstan­ces around Paul’s death.

“We were really glad that we met with the family,’’ he adds.

“I’ve learned out of this that communicat­ing to family members in times of extreme loss or crisis is a very important thing to do because here we have a lady that suffered in silence for almost 40 years before she really got the right informatio­n.’’

The Guardian was unable to reach Bernard for comment.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Barbara Bernard is flanked by her daughter, Deana Beaton, left, and granddaugh­ter Kindra Bernard at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Moncton, N.B., on Wednesday, Feb. 14. Bernard told the inquiry about the...
CP PHOTO Barbara Bernard is flanked by her daughter, Deana Beaton, left, and granddaugh­ter Kindra Bernard at the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Moncton, N.B., on Wednesday, Feb. 14. Bernard told the inquiry about the...
 ?? SUBMITTED IMAGE ?? Mary Francis Paul, in this framed photo provided by family members, died in 1977 near Charlottet­own’s waterfront due to acute alcoholism, aspiration by vomit and exposure. The woman’s daughter told the National Inquiry on Missing and Murdered...
SUBMITTED IMAGE Mary Francis Paul, in this framed photo provided by family members, died in 1977 near Charlottet­own’s waterfront due to acute alcoholism, aspiration by vomit and exposure. The woman’s daughter told the National Inquiry on Missing and Murdered...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada