The Hamilton Spectator

Top pathologis­t denies abuse of power

Pollanen breaks silence over accusation­s related to change in seven-week-old’s cause of death

- RACHEL MENDLESON

The province’s top pathologis­t is pushing back against an accusation that he abused his power to overrule some of his colleagues, breaking years of silence about his actions in a controvers­ial case involving the sudden death of an infant.

In a recent court filing, Dr. Michael Pollanen says it was his duty to get involved in the investigat­ion into the 2017 death. It’s the first time Pollanen has publicly commented on the specifics of the case, which has raised questions about the integrity of Ontario’s death investigat­ion system.

After performing an autopsy, Dr. Jane Turner, then-director of the former Hamilton forensic pathology unit, believed fractures in the seven-week-old boy’s body were likely caused by a bone disease. Police who investigat­ed the death had not seen evidence of abuse.

But, as the Star reported, a Hamilton child abuse pediatrici­an disagreed with Turner, and Pollanen became involved.

Turner claims Pollanen intervened to change the cause of death to child abuse, allegation­s she first made to the Death Investigat­ion Oversight Council in 2019. She resigned, in part, over her concerns about the case, saying she felt her integrity was being threatened.

Her allegation­s resurfaced Tuesday in Divisional Court, in a judicial review of the council’s handling of her complaint. She claims the oversight body, which was created to guard against the kind of tunnel vision she alleges Pollanen displayed, failed to take appropriat­e action to respond to her complaint against him.

The disagreeme­nt in the “baby Alexander” case was between Turner on one side and the child abuse pediatrici­an and a committee that reviewed the case on the other, assert written submission­s Pollanen made to the court.

“The job of (Pollanen) was to oversee those debates and try to come to the best conclusion based on the evidence collected during the death investigat­ion,” the submission­s read. “Dr. Pollanen did not conclude any specific cause of death but indicated that the underlying cause of the fractures has not been explained.”

Pollanen’s lawyer, Wayne Cunningham, told a panel of three judges on Tuesday that the problem in the baby Alexander case was a “breakdown in communicat­ion” — an issue the oversight council rightly sought to address in the systemic recommenda­tions it issued in response to Turner’s complaint.

Turner’s lawyer, Sujit Choudhry, replied: “The issue was not communicat­ion. It was the integrity of forensic pathology,” adding that Turner’s complaint raised matters that “go to the core” of why the oversight council was created.

“If the DIOC doesn’t do its job, ultimately there will be implicatio­ns in the criminal justice system, in the family law system with child apprehensi­on, and it falls to the court to pick up the pieces,” Choudhry told the court.

The oversight council argued in its written submission­s that it conducted a reasonable review of Turner’s allegation­s, and its recommenda­tions were “directly responsive” to her complaint.

After baby Alexander died, his parents were blamed for fractures found on their infant and separated from their surviving children.

The police found no criminalit­y and closed the case, but Alexander’s parents did not get their surviving kids back until August 2019, 20 months after they were removed. Ontario’s chief coroner Dr. Dirk Huyer then overruled the investigat­ing coroner, who had sided with Turner, and deemed the death a homicide, to the shock of police and some medical experts involved.

The family’s child protection proceeding­s dragged on until last fall, when the matter was finally closed, nearly five years after Alexander died. (Their names have been changed to protect their identities as required under the law governing child protection cases.)

The battle playing out in Divisional Court is the first legal challenge of the effectiven­ess of the oversight council, which was created in 2010 as the province tried to restore public confidence following the scandal involving Charles Smith, whose flawed autopsies led to parents being wrongfully convicted of killing their children.

The oversight council said it did its duty, including a review into Turner’s complaint that resulted in the council issuing 13 recommenda­tions. One of those called for external experts to review casework of the chief forensic pathologis­t.

The Divisional Court reserved its decision in the case. Turner is asking the court to send her complaint back to the oversight council for reconsider­ation, allow her to present new evidence and repay the legal costs she has incurred “to protect the integrity of forensic pathology in Ontario.”

 ?? ?? Dr. Michael Pollanen’s lawyer said the problem in the baby Alexander case was a breakdown in communicat­ion.
Dr. Michael Pollanen’s lawyer said the problem in the baby Alexander case was a breakdown in communicat­ion.
 ?? ?? The lawyer for Dr. Jane Turner said the real issue was “the integrity of forensic pathology.”
The lawyer for Dr. Jane Turner said the real issue was “the integrity of forensic pathology.”

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