The Telegram (St. John's)

Another family of an inmate who died in prison suing government

Doug Neary's death was ‘preventabl­e and unnecessar­y,' their lawyer says

- ROSIE MULLALEY

Doug Neary’s family says it was prison staff and management’s fault that he died while behind bars, and they want the government to pay.

Neary’s widow, brother and mother have filed a lawsuit against the provincial government and are seeking compensati­on for the damages and losses they’ve suffered as a result of Neary’s death at Her Majesty’s Penitentia­ry (HMP) in August 2017.

Lawyer Bob Buckingham, who is representi­ng the family and estate, stated in a news release Friday that they believe Neary’s death was “preventabl­e and unnecessar­y.”

“Mr. Neary was an individual who needed help,” Buckingham stated. “He was improperly treated while incarcerat­ed and, as set out in the statement of claim, his death was preventabl­e.”

Neary was being held in custody at the time and had no criminal record.

According to the statement of claim, it was the 37-year-old’s first time in jail.

The statement of claim noted that prior to being taken to HMP on Aug. 11, he told staff he suffered from depression, social anxiety and bipolar disorder, and that he was taking psychiatri­c medication.

According to the statement, when Neary, who had been deemed a high-risk inmate, injured his hand at HMP on Aug. 16, his request to see a doctor was turned down. He was also refused ice and wasn’t provided anything for pain, it stated.

“One of the correction­al officers told him to stop whining,” it stated.

The next day, Neary was taken to hospital, where it was determined he had a fracture, and his hand was put in a cast.

While at the hospital under the supervisio­n of correction­s officers, the statement of claim says, Neary was shackled in handcuffs, which resulted in “intentiona­l infliction of physical harm.” It states they also degraded him and treated him with indignity, poking fun at him and threatenin­g him, causing him psychologi­cal harm, pain and suffering.

Throughout his incarcerat­ion, according to the statement of claim, Neary complained repeatedly to HMP psychiatri­st Dr. David Craig about severe anxiety and panic attacks.

It stated Neary was taken off his mental health care medication on Aug. 28 or 29, and on Aug. 29 he informed correction­s officers he feared for his safety against other inmates.

On Aug. 30, inmates were locked down for the night. Neary had placed a sheet tied to the right corner of his cell, blocking it from view and the light was left on — both breaches of prison regulation­s, according to the statement.

At 12:30 a.m. that night, a correction­s officer conducting an hourly count of inmates saw the bed sheet covering the bars and found Neary hanging against the bars, having taken his own life.

The statement of claim says the prison failed in its obligation to provide inmates with essential health care services and didn’t take reasonable steps to ensure living conditions are safe and healthy to ensure no one committed suicide. It said they had a duty to protect vulnerable and at-risk inmates.

It said the action or inaction of HMP’S superinten­dent of prisons, correction­s officers, supervisor­s and institutio­nal medical staff, and their failure to abide by policies and procedures, resulted in Neary’s suffering and death. It said there was an abuse of a public office, breach of fiduciary duty and breach of Neary’s charter rights.

Buckingham said a lack of a proper legislativ­e framework, inadequate training and poor management combined to create a recipe for disaster in Neary’s circumstan­ce.

“Despite reports going back to inquiries in 1991, following an inmate’s death, followed by the Decades of Darkness review in 2008, little has happened to bring the legislatio­n, governing policy or the people who run the correction­al facilities in this province into the modern era of understand­ing current societal needs when it comes to correction­s and how our institutio­ns, especially Her Majesty’s Penitentia­ry, should be managed,” he said.

Buckingham said he will utilize all legal means and resources to “expose the antiquated, inhumane and neo-medieval managerial approach

The statement of claim says the prison failed in its obligation to provide inmates with essential health care services and didn’t take reasonable steps to ensure living conditions are safe and healthy to ensure no one committed suicide. It said they had a duty to protect vulnerable and at-risk inmates.

to correction­s which applies to Her Majesty’s Penitentia­ry.”

Neary’s family is seeking compensati­on for such things as funeral and burial costs, loss of income and loss of employment benefits.

It is the second lawsuit filed by a family of an inmate who was at the centre of an official probe into deaths at provincial correction­al facilities over a one-year period.

Skye Martin’s family is also suing the government and prison staff after she died at the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Correction­al Centre for Women in Clarenvill­e on April 21, 2018, when she forced food down her throat.

In reviewing the deaths, retired RNC superinten­dent Marlene Jesso pointed to several systemic issues within the justice system.

No court dates have been set for either of the two cases, as they make their way through the legal process.

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