Close X
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nova Scotia justice minister promises mother report on son's death in jail

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Feb, 2015 10:38 AM

    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's minister of justice says she will give the mother of a man who died of a methadone overdose in jail copies of an internal inquiry once police have finished their investigation.

    Lena Metlege Diab said Thursday she sympathizes with Clayton Cromwell's family, who have been searching for answers about his death since he was found unresponsive April 7 in his cell at the Central Nova Scotia Correctional Facility in Halifax.

    "What we have undertaken to do is give them all the information we have but after the police investigation has been completed," Diab said, adding that the premature release of the internal inquiry could jeopardize the investigation.

    A medical examiner's report says the 23-year-old man died accidentally from an overdose of methadone. The amount of methadone found in his blood according to the report is consistent with a single therapeutic dose, depending on one's body weight, the Capital District Health Authority said.

    But Cromwell wasn't supposed to be taking the drug and he "did not have extensive prior methadone use and tolerance," says the report.

    His mother Elizabeth Cromwell says she's upset that she has waited almost a year without learning anything about how her son obtained the drug while he was at the provincial jail while awaiting a court appearance on a drug trafficking charge.

    "I want justice for Clayton," she said in an interview. "This ... devastated my life. I don't want somebody else's mom getting a phone call and a visit from the chaplain."

    Devin Maxwell, the mother's lawyer, filed a freedom of information request to get a copy of the internal inquiry but it was refused. Officials cited the need to protect her dead son's privacy.

    The bits of information the 52-year-old woman has received disturb her and lead to more questions.

    On the day before Cromwell's death, all inmates were locked up in the unit for a search, prison records say. His mother said he didn't call her that day, which was unusual for him.

    Those same records say another inmate was rushed to a hospital as staff distributed medications.

    The Capital District Health Authority said it provides methadone to inmates who were undergoing methadone treatment prior to incarceration and the dosages are in liquid form.

    There are no plans to launch an external investigation, the health board said.

    The Justice Department said earlier in the week it could not comment on the details of Cromwell's case due to the ongoing police investigation and instead issued a statement about the prevalence of contraband throughout the province's corrections system.

    "Contraband is a problem in all prisons and offenders find increasingly creative ways to get around the rules," it said. "Despite our best efforts to keep contraband, including drugs, out of our prisons, they do find ways in."

    A Justice Department report into Cromwell's death says the jail has reviewed the incident to see if standards were met. But the report, obtained by The Canadian Press through a freedom of information request, is mostly blanked out citing privacy and security reasons.

    NDP justice critic Frank Corbett said the responses don't indicate how the drug problem at the jail is being addressed.

    "Merely to say we're being outsmarted by the criminals is not a good enough answer," he said.

    Howard Sapers, the correctional investigator of Canada, said refusing to provide information due to a police investigation may not be sufficient.

    "That needs to be very narrowly applied," he said. "It's not enough to say there is an ongoing investigation and therefore no information can be shared."

    His office has recommended federal prisons provide as much information as legally possible to families of dead inmates and they not wait until formal requests under freedom of information legislation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Five things to know about the Supreme Court's assisted dying ruling

    Five things to know about the Supreme Court's assisted dying ruling
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has unanimously overturned its own 1993 decision and struck down a ban on providing a doctor-assisted death to mentally competent but suffering and "irremediable" patients. Here are five things to know about the decision.

    Five things to know about the Supreme Court's assisted dying ruling

    RCMP death prompts Edmonton police to question use of officers at bail hearings

    RCMP death prompts Edmonton police to question use of officers at bail hearings
    EDMONTON — The fatal shooting of a Mountie by a man who was out on bail has prompted Edmonton police to suggest officers should not be handling bail hearings.

    RCMP death prompts Edmonton police to question use of officers at bail hearings

    $50M in the kitty: Alberta man on food run for cat finds out he won lottery

    $50M in the kitty: Alberta man on food run for cat finds out he won lottery
    ST. ALBERT, Alta. — There will be no shortage of kibble in the home of an Alberta man who was on a food run for his cat when he discovered he'd won a $50-million lottery prize.

    $50M in the kitty: Alberta man on food run for cat finds out he won lottery

    Toronto's measles count rises to six with report of another infected adult

    Toronto's measles count rises to six with report of another infected adult
    TORONTO — Public health officials in Toronto say the city's measles count has risen to six with the diagnosis of another adult patient.

    Toronto's measles count rises to six with report of another infected adult

    Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group

    Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group
    An outbreak that began last December hit 11 commercial chicken and turkey farms in Abbotsford, Chilliwack and Langley, as well as a backyard coop in Langley.

    Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group

    Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe

    Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Mounties have arrested five people in the 2012 murder of a 22-year-old man, after a lengthy probe involving hundreds of officers in B.C. and Alberta.

    Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe