Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Inquest Judge Makes No Recommendations In Woman's Suicide

The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 02:12 PM
    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba judge has made no recommendations in the death of a young woman suffering mental problems who hanged herself a month after being released from jail.
     
    The 18-year-old, who can’t be identified under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, died in August 2010 after serving two years for manslaughter at the Manitoba Youth Centre.
     
    The inquest was not called until the fall of 2012 and was completed in September.
     
    Judge Marvin Garfinkel, who presided over the inquest, says the delay means any recommendations he could make to prevent similar deaths would be irrelevant.
     
    The woman, who was a former ward of Manitoba Child and Family Services, had attempted suicide four times at the Youth Centre and was diagnosed with depression and anxiety.
     
    After her death, the chief medical examiner ruled no inquest was needed, but that decision was reversed a year later.
     
    No reason was given for the change.
     
    "Candidly, I must say that I am not inclined to make any formal recommendations," Garfinkel wrote in his report released Wednesday.
     
    "Throughout this report I have made observations and comments about the process. For example, the need for inquests to be held within a reasonable time after death."
     
    He also suggested that young people serving time for an offence should be brought before the court at least 30 days before they are released from custody in order to review their case in preparation for serving the community supervision part of their sentence.
     
    The woman was brought before the court the day before she was released.
     
    The inquest report notes that the woman had a troubled life and was taken into government care when she was five years old.
     
    She was then transferred to Anishinaabe Child Family Services and was sent to about 20 different placements while in care.
     
    The report says that along with the suicide attempts the woman was placed under observation about 28 times.
     
    Her behaviour never improved to the point where she was allowed unescorted leave from the Youth Centre to help her reintegrate into the community, Garfinkel wrote.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother
    Sheila Fynes, whose son Cpl. Stuart Langridge died by his own hand in 2008, says she's been made cautiously optimistic by the promise, but the stigma of mental illness, which can lead to suicide, is still very much a part of the military mindset.

    Soldier Suicide Recognition At DND An Uphill Battle, Says Victim's Mother

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office
    Day parole has been granted to an Alberta man who took nine people hostage at gunpoint in a Workers' Compensation Board office in downtown Edmonton.

    Day Parole Approved For Patrick Clayton Who Took Hostages In Edmonton WCB Office

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October
    The family of a terminally ill seven-year-old boy whose small Ontario town threw him an early Christmas parade has launched a foundation to support brain cancer research.

    Cancer Fund Launched By Terminally Ill Boy's Family Who Had Christmas In October

    B.C., Developer And First Nation Partner On $1.5 Billion Expansion Plan For Ski Resort

    The province says it will collaborate with the Berezan Group and the local Sts'ailes Band to develop the Hemlock Resort into a tourist destination in the Fraser Valley.

    B.C., Developer And First Nation Partner On $1.5 Billion Expansion Plan For Ski Resort

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea
    Leslie Black pleaded guilty in April to the attempted murder of Marlene Bird on June 1, 2014 in Prince Albert.

    Leslie Black, Saskatchewan Man Pleaded Guilty To Burning Woman Now Wants To Withdraw Plea

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he intends to meet with Canada's first ministers on Nov. 23 in advance of the climate-change conference in Paris.

    Justin Trudeau, First Ministers, Scientists To Gather Nov. 23 To Talk Climate Change