The Province

Use of restraint device by police justified: Judge

2008 INCIDENT: Woman awarded $9,000 after city found liable for breaching standard of care

- LAURA KANE

When Bobbi O’Shea sued the City of Vancouver and four police constables for binding her feet together and tethering them under a jail door, she hoped her case would end the practice.

Instead, the mother of four fears nothing will change now that a judge has ruled police were justified in using the restraint device.

“I know it’s going to happen again,” said O’Shea. “It’s too bad that there are going to be more individual­s who are going to have to suffer what I suffered.”

But she said she was pleased there would be at least “some awareness” of wrongdoing. The judge found the city liable for a breach in her standard of care and awarded her $9,000 in general damages in a decision Thursday.

The trial heard that O’Shea called 911 after suffering an anxiety attack from smoking crack cocaine in 2008.

She expected to be taken to hospital but instead was detained in Vancouver’s jail, where guards alleged she was unco-operative and placed her in the device, called a hobble.

She said she felt like she was being “tortured” while held for an hour in the hobble, a nylon strap that is wrapped tightly around the ankles, pulled under a closed door and tethered to an object outside.

Provincial court Judge Laura Bakan ruled that although the use of the hobble was justified to monitor O’Shea’s safety, the situation shouldn’t have escalated to the point where it was needed.

Bakan found that the officer in charge of the jail failed to communicat­e informatio­n he had about O’Shea’s medical history to other guards, including that she suffered from anxiety, depression and asthma, and had a cold.

O’Shea told the trial that she covered up a cell window with toilet paper to stop a male guard from seeing her use the toilet, prompting an officer to cuff her hands behind her back. After she moved her hands to her front repeatedly to wipe her badly running nose, she was placed in the hobble.

The judge said in her ruling that the officer should have followed the policy for people who are arrested for public intoxicati­on and taken O’Shea to see a nurse immediatel­y after her arrival at jail.

Bakan accepted that O’Shea felt “much pain” from the device, but did not find any assault or battery occurred, or that officers intended to cause her pain or punishment.

Vancouver police spokesman Const. Brian Montague said police unfortunat­ely are required to use the hobble from time to time. There are cases where people are intent on harming themselves or others, or exhibiting uncontroll­able violent behaviour, Montague said.

“Any restrainin­g device is used to help ensure not only the safety of officers, but the safety of the person in our custody,” he said.

Montague said the VPD will review and examine the court’s decision to determine if any changes to practices, policies and procedures are needed.

 ??  ?? Bobbi O’Shea sued the City of Vancouver and four police constables who were working as jail guards after she was placed in a restraint device in 2008.
— CP FILES
Bobbi O’Shea sued the City of Vancouver and four police constables who were working as jail guards after she was placed in a restraint device in 2008. — CP FILES

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