The Province

Family question’s death of Vancouver Island inmate

- LOUISE DICKSON

VICTORIA — The death of a newly admitted inmate at Vancouver Island Regional Correction­al Centre has devastated his family and friends, and left them searching for answers.

David Gordon Ivany, 26, died alone from an apparent illicit-drug overdose in his jail cell on June 21.

The B.C. Coroners Service is investigat­ing how Ivany died. B.C. Correction­s will also review the circumstan­ces.

Ivany was arrested by West Shore RCMP on June 18 and charged with flight from police and breaching his probation. He was transferre­d to the jail the next day and was scheduled to appear in Western Communitie­s provincial court on June 23.

If Ivany’s death is confirmed to be from an overdose, it raises the question of how he either brought drugs into the jail or got them there, especially when he was placed in isolation under new protocols put in place to keep COVID-19 out of correction­al centres.

It also raises the question of how often he was checked while being held alone in the induction unit, separate from the rest of the jail.

Police went to Joanna Ivany’s door late at night to notify her that her brother had died in jail from a drug overdose.

“My question to the cops was how could it be a drug overdose if he was in your care for 24 hours before he died,” said Joanna, who went to the jail the next day to collect his body.

“Everyone just wants answers. If he was taken care of properly, none of this would have happened. It could have been prevented if they did their job and just didn’t look at him as another First Nations person in this place.”

Friend Rob Iverson said Ivany’s death doesn’t make any sense because he didn’t use hard drugs.

“I just want closure. We don’t understand how this happened,” Iverson said. “It’s causing a lot of disturbanc­e. We’re all unsettled.”

Ivany liked marijuana but didn’t do heroin or fentanyl, said Iverson.

“No one said anything about a package exploding in him or anything like that. And David doesn’t do that. He’s not into this kind of thing. So how did he come across the drugs? Was he around other people? Could anyone have done this to him?” asked Iverson.

B.C. Correction­s said it maintains zero-tolerance for illegal drugs within correction­al centres and has stringent security measures to deal with contraband, including drugs. It has invested nearly $1.9 million in body scanners to enhance drug interdicti­on.

During the first 24 hours of admission, all individual­s receive a physical and mental health assessment. Trained staff provide addictions support and counsellin­g. Inmates also have access to opioid replacemen­t treatment and can participat­e in the methadone/suboxone program.

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