Edmonton Journal

Video sparks outrage

Ashley Smith’s family welcomes reaction to her death in the federal prison system

- CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD

TORONTO – If Canadians are outraged by the recent release of video depicting teenager Ashley Smith’s treatment in the federal prison system, it stands in stark contrast to how authoritie­s reacted both before and after her death.

“The reaction from Canadians is precisely what the family hoped would happen when the truth began to come out,” Julian Falconer, the lawyer for Smith’s family, said Thursday.

Estimating that as many as a million people may now have watched the video that he was finally able to release at coroner’s court this week, and which was then posted on major media websites, Falconer said wearily, “Today is a very welcome day.”

He was particular­ly heartened by Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s taking notice of the case in the House of Commons Thursday and calling Smith’s treatment “completely unacceptab­le.”

The video made public this week is a compilatio­n from prison surveillan­ce videotape, and shows Smith being duct-tapped into an airplane seat during one inter-prison transfer and being repeatedly forcibly injected with anti-psychotic drugs at the Joliette Institutio­n in Joliette, Que.

The 19-year-old teenager died Oct.19, 2007, in her segregatio­n cell at Kitchener’s Grand Valley Institute for Women. There, and at prisons across the country, Smith was well-known as one of the system’s most difficult-to-manage inmates.

She had a well-documented habit of “tying up,” or knotting makeshift ligatures around her neck, and sometimes cutting herself.

During her first stay at Grand Valley in the spring of 2007, whenever she tied up like this, guards would rush into her cell to cut off the ligatures.

These life-saving efforts weren’t always met with gratitude, but sometimes by a furious reaction, such as spitting and biting from Smith, who was about 200 pounds and stood five-foot, seven inches tall. Smith was moved out of Grand Valley for the summer, but returned on Aug. 31 that year — one of 17 such transfers that took her to nine different federal institutio­ns in five provinces.

But unknown to her, and over the objections of her handlers, the rules had changed — now guards were under strict orders not to enter her cell “as long as she was breathing,” as one of them testified at a 2008 preliminar­y hearing.

Prison bureaucrat­s were unhappy at the vast number of use-of-force reports these interventi­ons generated and pressured managers to reduce the numbers, who in turn pressured guards to monitor Smith from a distance instead of rushing into her cell. It was a recipe for the very disaster that unfolded — guards who were “counselled,” or discipline­d, for too quickly going to Smith’s aid and were now rendered timid and uncertain, and Smith unaware that the very ground under her had shifted.

In fact, as transcript­s from the preliminar­y hearing reveal, there was a virtual dry run of Smith’s last night just 11 days before she died.

On Oct. 8 that year, she had tied up eight times, one after another.

Guards, seeing that she was cutting her wrist with glass and “painting” a makeshift ligature with her own blood and tying it on her neck, called a manager for the OK to enter her cell — and were told not to do so until the manager arrived.

“That’s tremendous­ly wrong, isn’t it?” Howard Rubel, lawyer for the guards’ union, asked Launa Gratton, the prison’s security intelligen­ce officer, at the preliminar­y hearing.

“Yes,” Gratton replied.

“She could have died during that period of time, right?” Rubel asked. “Yes,” she said. She admitted that it was “a frequent direction” to the guards not to enter Smith’s cell “as long as she is breathing.”

The preliminar­y was held to determine if there were grounds to proceed with charges of criminal negligence causing death that were laid against three guards and a manager after Smith died. The charges were dropped after Ontario Court Judge D.G. Carr heard the evidence of the stark change in policy.

It was in October of 2010 that Falconer wrote William Elliott, then RCMP Commission­er, to beg that the force conduct a criminal investigat­ion into whether the managers ought to be charged.

The lawyer thoughtful­ly included excerpts of transcript­s from the guards’ testimony at the preliminar­y hearing, as well as from two reports, one by the independen­t correction­al investigat­or Howard Sapers and one by a psychiatri­st Sapers had asked to review Smith’s medical records.

Falconer, who is a criminal lawyer, told Elliott that because Smith was moved about the country’s prisons, and the RCMP is a national force, only the Mounties had jurisdicti­on.

But three months later, RCMP Superinten­dent Paul Bateman told Falconer the RCMP “respectful­ly disagree” with his view and that either the local Waterloo Regional Police or the Quebec provincial police should investigat­e, as Grand Valley and Joliette were in their jurisdicti­ons.

The Waterloo probe resulted in no charges, and the Quebec provincial police reviewed some of the Joliette video evidence and ruled the repeated injections of antipsycho­tics were “a medical decision.”

Astonishin­gly, the Quebec officer, Sgt. Mario Laflamme, made that decision despite never having seen Ashley Smith’s medical file.

“That’s the ultimate joke,” Falconer said Thursday. “If they’d asked, the family would have given a consent (to get the file). They were the ones who wanted the investigat­ion.”

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