Lethbridge Herald

Jailhouse beating isn’t something to be cheered

DEFENCE LAWYER BLASTS THOSE PLEASED BY BEATING OF CONVICTED MURDERER

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — CALGARY

A criminal defence lawyer who has raised concerns in the past about safety at a Calgary jail says people shouldn’t be happy that a convicted murderer in a highprofil­e case was beaten there.

“Convicted or not, he’s entitled to protection and basic human rights. Even if he didn’t show that to his victims,” said Balfour Der, who added some of his own clients have also been attacked at the jail and at other facilities.

Douglas Garland was sentenced Friday to spend the rest of his life behind bars for killing Alvin and Kathy Liknes and five-year-old Nathan O’Brien in 2014.

Hours after the sentencing, Calgary police said a 57-yearold inmate at the Calgary Remand Centre suffered serious injuries and was taken to hospital after being assaulted by several other inmates. Garland’s lawyer, Kim Ross, has confirmed it was his client.

Some of the reaction on social media cheered on the attack, saying Garland deserved it. Police are still investigat­ing. “If there’s members of the public who think, yeah, that’s good, I’m glad this happened, or whatever they may think about it, they are absolutely, totally wrong,” Der said in an interview Sunday.

“It’s not what we should ever expect should happen in a Canadian jail.”

In September, Alvin Clifford Chiniquay, 40, died in hospital two weeks after a beating at the facility. An inmate has been charged with first-degree murder in the death.

Ross said Saturday that Garland was being held in an area that should have been safe and called the attack “disappoint­ing,” noting that Garland had been in custody for over two years awaiting trial without an incident.

He said he believed Garland’s injuries were not serious.

Dan Laville, a spokesman for Alberta’s justice and solicitor general ministry, wouldn’t release the specific details of Garland’s custody at the facility, citing privacy concerns.

But Laville said that generally, placement decisions include an assessment that considers security needs and also involves collaborat­ion with health profession­als.

Laville said inmates go through a process to ensure those who are known to be incompatib­le are kept separate.

“Correction­al centres can be a difficult, sometimes volatile environmen­t, and correction­al peace officers are trained profession­als who both try to anticipate and prevent incidents when possible, and who react quickly and appropriat­ely when an incident occurs,” Laville said.

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