The Telegram (St. John's)

Lawyer has doubts HMP staff will be co-operative

Bob Buckingham says he had suspicions others were involved in Jonathan Henoche’s death

- ANDREW ROBINSON

The defence lawyer who was going to represent Jonathan Henoche in a first-degree murder trial next summer has some doubts about how co-operative correction­s staff will be with investigat­ors looking into his former client’s death.

On Wednesday, it was announced that the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has determined Henoche’s sudden death inside Her Majesty’s Penitentia­ry in St. John’s on Nov. 6 was a homicide.

The 33-year-old from Labrador was charged with first-degree murder in the 2018 death of 88-year-old Regula Schule of Happy Valley-goose Bay.

Bob Buckingham, the St. John’s defence lawyer due to represent Henoche in the trial, cautioned when reached by The Telegram Thursday that the homicide ruling is simply a medical determinat­ion and not a criminal one.

“In terms of determinin­g a matter of death, the medical examiner determines whether it’s natural, an accident or a suicide, undetermin­ed or a homicide,” he said.

However, Buckingham said the ruling confirmed his suspicions that Henoche’s death was the result of some form of interventi­on on the part of others inside the prison.

“That’s an important finding in this process — it’s what I thought from the beginning,” he said.

The details of what happened Nov. 6 have not been made public, though a source previously told The Telegram Henoche was found dead that day in a segregatio­n unit cell following an altercatio­n with correction­s officers.

In light of the fact his former client’s side of the story can never be known, Buckingham has concerns about how co-operative staff at Her Majesty’s Penitentia­ry will be with the Royal Newfoundla­nd Constabula­ry. The RNC’S major crime unit is investigat­ing the incident.

“I think that in terms of the institutio­n itself, they have rolled up the drawbridge and staffed the walls,” he said. “They are, I would imagine, being quite protective. That’s my assessment so far. I’m not sure how much co-operation the police are going to get.”

Once the investigat­ion concludes, Buckingham wants a public inquiry to be called into Henoche’s death.

“I think there should be a recognitio­n that there are some problems institutio­nally with our penitentia­ry services,” he said.

A spokesman for the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Associatio­n of Public and Private Employees, the union representi­ng correction­s officers in the province, told The Telegram Thursday union president Jerry Earle would not comment on the matter.

Justice Minister Andrew Parsons spoke to reporters outside the House of Assembly Thursday morning, but was reluctant to comment on specifics related to the police investigat­ion. He declined to comment on the status of the correction­s officers involved in the incident.

“Unfortunat­ely, I cannot comment on it — it is a human resources issue,” he said. “Given the fact it is an ongoing investigat­ion, it would be inappropri­ate for me to talk about it.”

As he did last month when commenting on the matter, Parsons offered his condolence­s to the family, adding he is also thinking about the inmates and staff.

“It’s never an easy environmen­t on any given day, but when you have a situation like this, all I can say is you take it extremely seriously,” he said.

Buckingham said he spoke with Henoche’s family Wednesday and they remain upset about his death.

“They’re still suffering from their loss and they continue to be devastated. They are processing the news that it is now considered a homicide, and they’re still in shock with respect to that — notwithsta­nding the thought it might come down to that. But they’re still in shock to hear from officials that it is being investigat­ed as a homicide in a place where he was supposed to be kept for his safety.”

 ?? ANDREW ROBINSON/THE TELEGRAM ?? Justice Minister Andrew Parsons met with reporters Thursday to respond to questions about the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner's ruling that the death of an inmate at Her Majesty's Penitentia­ry on Nov. 6 was a homicide.
ANDREW ROBINSON/THE TELEGRAM Justice Minister Andrew Parsons met with reporters Thursday to respond to questions about the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner's ruling that the death of an inmate at Her Majesty's Penitentia­ry on Nov. 6 was a homicide.
 ?? FACEBOOK PHOTO ?? The sudden death of inmate Jonathan Henoche, 33, at Her Majesty's Penitentia­ry has been declared a homicide by the province's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
FACEBOOK PHOTO The sudden death of inmate Jonathan Henoche, 33, at Her Majesty's Penitentia­ry has been declared a homicide by the province's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
 ?? JOE GIBBONS FILE PHOTO/ THE TELEGRAM ?? St. John's defence lawyer Bob Buckingham.
JOE GIBBONS FILE PHOTO/ THE TELEGRAM St. John's defence lawyer Bob Buckingham.

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