Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Aunt Of Woman In Laundry Chute Death Questions Police Work In Other Deaths

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2019 07:48 PM

    REGINA — The aunt of a woman who died after falling down a hotel laundry chute says a report critical of the investigation raises questions about how Regina police have reviewed other sudden deaths.


    Delores Stevenson also says she believes assumptions were made about her niece because she was an Indigenous woman.


    Nadine Machiskinic was found severely injured in the laundry room of Regina's Delta hotel in 2015 and died in hospital.


    Police said evidence did not point to someone being criminally responsible for her death.


    The force recently released an RCMP review of the investigation.


    The report said the investigation did not meet professional standards, and it made 14 recommendations to improve how officers deal with similar cases.


    Police have said many of the recommendations have been implemented and a new approach to case management is to be in place later this year.


    Stevenson says the report validates her concerns that the investigation into her niece's death was flawed.


    She says the recommendations and changes are important, but they do not address concerns of other families who have had loved ones suddenly die.


    An inquest heard it was more than 60 hours before police were called about Machiskinic's death and more than a year before police issued a public appeal for information about two men shown on surveillance video with someone who appeared to be Machiskinic.


    Officers took four months to send for a toxicology report.


    The coroner initially ruled the cause of Machiskinic's death could not be determined, but later changed it to accidental.


    A jury at a coroner's inquest last year changed the ruling back to undetermined. That finding prompted the police chief to ask RCMP to review the Regina force's investigation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Hurt During Arrest For Alleged Slurs At B.C. Vigil For New Zealand Victims

    Surrey RCMP say it happened Sunday afternoon at the pre-planned event in the city's civic plaza.    

    Man Hurt During Arrest For Alleged Slurs At B.C. Vigil For New Zealand Victims

    Audain Prize For Visual Art Raised To $100,000, To Boost Profile Of B.C. Artists

    VANCOUVER — A foundation that supports the visual arts, mainly in British Columbia, is more than tripling the value of the Audain Prize for Visual Art, awarded annually to a distinguished B.C. artist.

    Audain Prize For Visual Art Raised To $100,000, To Boost Profile Of B.C. Artists

    Man Arrested In British Columbia On Murder Charge In Toronto

    Man Arrested In British Columbia On Murder Charge In Toronto
    Police say they stopped a man who was riding a bicycle without a helmet in Nanaimo on Friday.    

    Man Arrested In British Columbia On Murder Charge In Toronto

    RCMP Say Disappearance Of B.C. Cowboy Ben Tyner 'May Involve Criminality'

    The case of a rancher who has been missing in British Columbia since January is being treated as a suspicious disappearance by the RCMP.  

    RCMP Say Disappearance Of B.C. Cowboy Ben Tyner 'May Involve Criminality'

    Wilderness Survival Book Borrowed In 1977 Is Finally Returned To B.C. Library

    VANCOUVER — A book about surviving in the outdoors has been returned to a B.C. library branch more than four decades after it was checked out.

    Wilderness Survival Book Borrowed In 1977 Is Finally Returned To B.C. Library

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Will Begin Hearing Oil-Transport Reference Case Today

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Will Begin Hearing Oil-Transport Reference Case Today
    British Columbia's Court of Appeal will consider the question of provincial powers over the future of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project during a five-day hearing that starts today.

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Will Begin Hearing Oil-Transport Reference Case Today