Times Colonist

Father of Radiohead roadie awaits inquest six years on

- DAVID FRIEND

TORONTO — The father of Scott Johnson, the British drum technician who died in the Radiohead stage collapse in Toronto six years ago, says he expects a coroner’s inquest into the incident to begin early next year.

Ken Johnson said he spoke with Ontario’s chief coroner on Wednesday — a day before the band returned to Toronto for their first concert since the incident in 2012 — and was told the tentative window for the inquest had been set for February or March. A spokesman for the office declined to confirm the timeline.

Starting the proceeding­s would be a step toward what Johnson hopes will acknowledg­e the series of events that led to his son’s death, and ensure safety precaution­s are in place to prevent a similar accident from happening again.

“They can’t bring Scott back — that’s obviously painful,” Johnson said from Birmingham on Thursday. “But it needs to be clear. I think people need to see what’s happened.”

Scott Johnson, 33, died on June 16, 2012, when part of a massive stage structure crashed down just hours before Radiohead was due to perform at Downsview Park in Toronto’s north end. Three people were injured.

Charges were laid in the case against the show’s promoter Live Nation, engineer Domenic Cugliari and contractor Optex Staging under provincial health and safety laws.

The charges were stayed last year after a judge ruled the matter took too long to get to trial.

The developmen­t shifted the focus to a coroner’s inquest, which is an independen­t investigat­ion designed to bring public attention on the circumstan­ces of a death, rather than to assign blame.

Johnson, who himself has spent about 18 years as a technical adviser for the U.K. scaffoldin­g industry, said he hopes the inquest will bring some closure in a case in which he believes no one has taken responsibi­lity for the incident.

He said he remains in touch with Radiohead’s band members and was invited to attend the Toronto concert as a guest. He declined the offer to focus on the pending inquest.

“As much as I’d love to have been with them, I thought, it’s going to be a pretty tough night for them anyway,” Johnson said.

“I don’t think I could probably add anything or make any better for them or the crew, really.

“It’s something they’re going to find they’re going through on their own.”

Radiohead was scheduled to perform two shows in Toronto — Thursday and today — at the Scotiabank Arena.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada