National Post

Suit alleges misconduct at Alberta funeral homes

- By Chris Purdy

EDMONTON • A lawsuit filed by Alberta’s former chief medical examiner for what she says was political interferen­ce in her job also claims funeral home staff transporte­d a body in the back of a pickup truck and on another occasion wore a skating costume at a death scene.

Dr. Anny Sauvageau makes the allegation­s in a statement of claim filed this week against the government, several highrankin­g bureaucrat­s and the justice minister. She said her office was pressured in 2014 to top up body-transporta­tion contracts with funeral homes by $3 million “to appease the Alberta Funeral Services Associatio­n and the rural vote.”

Other complaints about funeral homes include that some workers took pictures of crime scenes for personal collection­s and others told one family it had no choice but to hire their services.

Some funeral companies also double-billed Dr. Sauvageau’s office and families of deceased persons for transporti­ng the same body, the lawsuit alleges.

Dr. Sauvageau said she brought her concerns last year to justice officials and Premier Jim Prentice. But Mr. Prentice told her he wouldn’t intervene because she had already filed a complaint with the Public Interest Commission­er, she said.

Dr. Sauvageau also forwarded a list of complaints about funeral homes to the auditor general, she said. That office couldn’t confirm if it is looking into the complaints, but a spokesman with the Public Interest Commission­er’s office said it has started an investigat­ion.

Dr. Sauvageau said in the lawsuit seeking $5.15 million that on Sept. 26, the day after she received a response from Mr. Prentice, she was informed her contract would not be renewed. No reasons were given.

The lawsuit alleges the decision not to keep Dr. Sauvageau in the position was “in direct retaliatio­n and retributio­n” for concerns she raised, not specifical­ly about funeral homes, but about political interferen­ce.

The independen­ce of the medical examiner’s office is essential to protecting the integrity of death investigat­ions, says the lawsuit.

Dr. Sauvageau claims she was informed, in private, that her office was not to operate at arm’s length and that Maryann Everett, an assistant deputy justice minister, once told her: “Your job is to make the minister look good.”

The same woman, the lawsuit alleges, also dismissed Dr. Sauvageau’s concerns about inflated funeral home contracts with: “You think too much of the taxpayers.”

Other allegation­s of interferen­ce include that Dr. Sauvageau was forbidden from firing a morgue employee who made a hoax about how another worker was going to show up at work with a gun and kill everyone. She was told the employee might be a relative of a deputy chief of staff of then-premier Dave Hancock.

The lawsuit says Mr. Hancock requested a cause of death review in a case after receiving a request from a constituen­t. Other officials also inappropri­ately intervened by asking, on behalf of relatives of a legislatur­e member, about another death, says the lawsuit.

None of the allegation­s has been proven in court and a statement of defence has not been filed.

Justice Minister Jonathan Denis said Thursday that it would be inappropri­ate to comment on a case that’s before the courts. The Alberta Funeral Services Associatio­n did not immediatel­y comment.

Brian Mason, an NDP member of the legislatur­e, said the lawsuit makes serious allegation­s and, if compelling evidence is presented at trial, the government should take action.

“We need to protect families in this province. It’s the responsibi­lity of the government that they’re not being defrauded or gouged.”

 ?? John Ulan / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dr. Anny Sauvageau, Alberta’s former chief medical examiner, is suing the province, claiming political interferen­ce in her job
and overpaymen­t to funeral homes. She says she was told her contract would not be renewed after she complained.
John Ulan / THE CANADIAN PRESS Dr. Anny Sauvageau, Alberta’s former chief medical examiner, is suing the province, claiming political interferen­ce in her job and overpaymen­t to funeral homes. She says she was told her contract would not be renewed after she complained.

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