Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Man beaten by Vancouver police kind, loyal: sister

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Apr, 2023 01:34 PM
  • Man beaten by Vancouver police kind, loyal: sister

BURNABY, B.C. - The sister of a man beaten to death during a confrontation with Vancouver police says the officers involved should lose their jobs.

Melissa Gray says the death of her brother, Myles, more than seven years ago has devastated their family members, who have been waiting for accountability from the officers and the police department.

Myles Gray, 33, died on Aug. 13, 2015, following a beating involving seven officers that sent him into cardiac arrest and left him with a broken eye socket, a partially dislocated jaw, a crushed voice box and a ruptured testicle and other injuries.

His sister told the media on Monday as the coroner's inquest into the man's death began that those officers "stole her brother's life" and don't deserve to continue in their jobs in policing.

British Columbia's Prosecution Service declined to approve criminal charges against the officers in 2020, saying they were the only eyewitnesses to the man's death and offered accounts described as incomplete and sometimes inconsistent.

Gray was the first to testify at the inquest, telling the jury her brother was goofy, kind and loyal. He made friends and made people laugh wherever he went, she said.

"We take comfort knowing that Myles was innocent," she said.

The decision by the Crown not to pursue charges against the officers involved in the beating left the family feeling “broken and hopeless,” Gray told the inquest.

She said her brother was diagnosed with bipolar disorder after an episode in high school around 1999, but to her knowledge he was stable after that and was never unemployed.

Officers had originally been called to a report of someone in a mental health crisis, and Gray says police need to learn to recognize those situations and be able to verbally de-escalate such an event.

"If someone is having a mental health crisis and they aren't wearing shoes and they aren't wearing a shirt, they should be able to identify that and they should treat them more humanely," Grey told the media before testifying.

The inquest's witness list indicates coroner Larry Marzinzik and a jury will hear testimony from 41 people over 10 days, including the officers directly involved in the beating.

The BC Coroners Service said the jury can't make findings of "legal responsibility," but can only make recommendations to prevent future deaths under similar circumstances.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. cautious but encouraged by bail reform moves

B.C. cautious but encouraged by bail reform moves
British Columbia's attorney general says the province is treading carefully to ensure the overincarceration of Indigenous people and other racialized groups is not made worse by proposed federal changes to the bail system.

B.C. cautious but encouraged by bail reform moves

Canada on sidelines as allies move ahead on AUKUS

Canada on sidelines as allies move ahead on AUKUS
That includes formalizing American and British plans to help Australia develop a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines in response to growing concerns about China's actions in the Indo-Pacific region.    

Canada on sidelines as allies move ahead on AUKUS

Eight skunks found dead in B.C. had avian flu

Eight skunks found dead in B.C. had avian flu
British Columbia's Ministry of Agriculture says the skunks were infected with the same H5N1 strain that has caused the deaths of millions of domestic poultry since the outbreak began in April last year. The skunks were found in residential areas in both cities and were taken to B.C.'s Animal Health Centre over concerns they may have been deliberately poisoned.

Eight skunks found dead in B.C. had avian flu

Water taxi crash in B.C. prompts report's caution

Water taxi crash in B.C. prompts report's caution
A report from the board says four of the five people aboard the Rocky Pass were injured when the boat came to an abrupt stop on the rocks on Jan. 25, 2022. The operator, who had 20 years of experience captaining the taxi, was using GPS in very foggy conditions when the navigation device froze.

Water taxi crash in B.C. prompts report's caution

House in Maple Ridge hit by gunfire

House in Maple Ridge hit by gunfire
According to Mounties, one residence in the area was hit by gunfire. The residence was occupied at the time of the incident but no gunshot injuries occurred. The victims are cooperating with the police investigation. 

House in Maple Ridge hit by gunfire

Dead body of a woman found inside a tent in the Downtown Eastside

Dead body of a woman found inside a tent in the Downtown Eastside
The cause of death remains under investigation. Evidence indicates the woman died prior to the fire starting. Vancouver Police are working with the BC Coroners Service to identify the woman.

Dead body of a woman found inside a tent in the Downtown Eastside