The Province

Court allows picketing at theatre where man almost died

- JOSEPH BREAN NATIONAL POST

The family of a young man who nearly choked to death on popcorn during the The Hangover movie in 2009, leaving him semi-comatose for six months, will be free to protest in front of the Kitchener, Ont., theatre after a judge declined Cineplex’s emergency request for a restrainin­g order.

A civil trial is scheduled to begin in March. Cineplex Odeon will defend itself on the grounds that Chadrick John Veenhof, then about 20, was on “illegal substances” at the time of his catastroph­ic brain injuries, caused by lack of oxygen.

For six months after the incident, Veenhof was only partly responsive, but then his recovery began in earnest. Now he lives with assistance, but can get outside, and is working toward independen­ce, according to a 2012 profile in the Waterloo Region Record.

Last month, according to court records, his father Frederick told the manager of the Kitchener Cineplex he was seeking rehabilita­tion costs for Chad, and if the company did not reply within a week, as many as 80 people would protest and hand out pamphlets claiming that, when Chad started choking a short way into the movie, the theatre did not turn on the lights, stop the movie, call 911, ask if anyone could help, or follow emergency instructio­ns when a customer called.

On Dec. 6, the father picketed the theatre with a sign saying “YOU ARE NOT SAFE IN THIS THEATRE”

Fearing damage to its business, Cineplex asked a judge last week to ban Veenhof’s friends, family and associates, including Frederick, from picketing or protesting.

Superior Court Judge Donald Gordon rejected Cineplex’s motion on the legal grounds that a restrainin­g order in this case would, in effect, be permanent because the matter would never go to trail.

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