Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Canada, Britain probing deaths as suicides

Toronto-area man is charged with selling packages of toxic salt in 40 countries

- VJOSA ISAI

Authoritie­s in Canada and Britain are investigat­ing at least 100 poisoning deaths as suicides tied to the online businesses of a Canadian man accused of selling a toxic salt.

Kenneth Law, 57, of Mississaug­a, a city west of Toronto, is accused of operating a group of businesses that shipped about 1,200 packages of toxic salt to people in 40 countries, fulfilling orders placed on his website.

Canadian authoritie­s have charged him with helping 14 people die by suicide, a number that may grow as investigat­ions into Law’s businesses continue in Canada and Britain.

In Canada, where investigat­ors said Law shipped 160 packages, he has been charged by multiple police agencies in Ontario with counseling or aiding suicide. The victims were between 16 and 36 years old.

Britain is investigat­ing the deaths of 88 of the 272 people in the country who purchased sodium nitrite — a salt that is used as a food preservati­ve — from Law’s website, a spokespers­on for Britain’s National Crime Agency said in an email.

Law, who has yet to be arraigned, appeared in court Wednesday, where his next hearing was set for Oct. 31. He is being held at a jail in Ontario.

He will plead innocent, said his lawyer, Matthew Gourlay, who called the case a “novel applicatio­n of the law.”

“We are not aware of any similar prosecutio­n in Canada,” Gourlay said. “Our position is that none of the conduct alleged against Mr. Law — which, to be clear, is not admitted — validly comes within the scope of the criminal prohibitio­n.”

The charges against Law come as Canada is debating a recent loosening of its federal assisted-suicide law, which has made the country’s policy one of the most liberal in the world. Since 2021, Canada has permitted assisted death for people suffering from a chronic painful condition, even if that condition is not terminal.

Even so, the law requires people who are terminally ill when they apply for assisted death to be assessed by a physician or nurse practition­er and follow other rules before being permitted to die. Those practition­ers are exempt from criminal charges of counseling or aiding suicide, which have a maximum penalty of 14 years in prison.

“Let us be clear that we will not tolerate criminal actions by those who prey on vulnerable individual­s in our communitie­s and we will hold those responsibl­e accountabl­e,” Inspector Simon James of the York Regional Police, which was involved in the Canadian investigat­ion, said at a news conference last month.

Police in Thunder Bay, a city in northweste­rn Ontario, believe Ashtyn Prosser is among those who purchased products from Law. He died in March, one month before he would turn 20, his mother, Kim Prosser, said.

“The one thing that could ever change who I am, at my core, would be losing a child,” said Prosser, who added that her son had struggled with mental health issues during the pandemic. Authoritie­s in other provinces and countries have joined the sprawling investigat­ion into Law, who they believe had been selling the products online since late 2020.

Law was arrested in May and charged in two cases, and another 12 charges were laid in August. He worked as a cook at the Fairmont Royal York, a luxury hotel in downtown Toronto, according to his union, Unite Here. Kevin Abels, a union organizer, said Law was terminated by the hotel. Prosser has been at work creating a mental health nonprofit in her son’s memory.

“I don’t blame him for my son’s death. I don’t blame anyone for my son’s death,” she said, tearfully adding: “Is there something I could have done differentl­y or that I could have done more, and that maybe he would still be here? As a parent, I don’t think you can avoid that question ever, and I understand how easy then it would be to jump on board to blame somebody else.”

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