Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver police officer tells inquest he punched Myles Gray as hard as he could

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Apr, 2023 01:15 PM
  • Vancouver police officer tells inquest he punched Myles Gray as hard as he could

BURNABY, B.C. — A Vancouver police officer told a British Columbia coroner’s jury that he punched Myles Gray in the head as hard as he could several times because he didn’t think anything else would work to subdue the man, other than shooting him.

Const. Kory Folkestad testified on the third day of the inquest into Gray’s death nearly eight years ago following a beating by several officers that left him with injuries including a fractured eye socket, a crushed voice box and a ruptured testicle.

Folkestad told the jury in Burnaby, B.C., that he and his partner were both in plain clothes when they responded to a call for immediate assistance from a uniformed officer on the day Gray died in August 2015.

When the trio of officers found Gray in a yard, Folkestad said he believed the man wanted to fight them and at one point Gray "tensed every part of his body" and roared.

Folkestad said another officer pepper sprayed Gray before they tried to handcuff him. 

"All of a sudden, he just ripped his arms out from us and squared off with us with a speed and strength I couldn’t believe," Folkestad said.

Folkestad, who told the jury he has been diagnosed with PTSD because of the incident, said he struck Gray in the face multiple times as hard as he could.

"I didn’t think anything else would work at the time and we would have to shoot him," he said.

At one point during the confrontation, the officer said he was knocked unconscious. 

When he woke up, Folkestad said he tried to control one of Gray’s legs before additional officers arrived and he was taken for medical attention.

Folkestad told the jury that when he first saw Gray he believed the 33−year−old was experiencing "excited delirium," something he said makes people unpredictable with "superhuman strength."

Prior to the officer’s testimony, coroner Larry Marzinzik provided the jury with what he called a "cautionary note" about the term.

Marzinzik said, to his knowledge, excited delirium is not recognized as a cause of death by most pathologists and "there is still some discussion within the medical community over its relevance" as a cause of death. 

The jury members should put less weight on the evidence of a lay person on the topic and would be hearing from a medical expert later, he said.

Several other officers with the Vancouver Police Department are expected to testify at the inquest later Wednesday.

The BC Prosecution Service said in 2020 that charges would not be approved against the officers, saying it couldn’t prove an offence had been committed. 

The jury won’t be able to make findings of legal responsibility at the inquest but  may make recommendations to prevent similar deaths in the future.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada goose population 'havoc' on B.C. park space

Canada goose population 'havoc' on B.C. park space
The Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation wants the public to report a nest sighting so staff can replace the eggs with ones that have been frozen to help control the population. Vancouver is an ideal habitat for the birds, with few natural predators and plenty of newly seeded fields and lawns.

Canada goose population 'havoc' on B.C. park space

Tribunal orders payout over caste discrimination

Tribunal orders payout over caste discrimination
Tribunal adjudicator Sonya Pighin says brothers Inderjit and Avninder Dhillon used a caste-based slur against Bhangu during the brawl at the B.C. firm's 2018 party, and ordered that they pay him $9,755 in compensation.

Tribunal orders payout over caste discrimination

B.C. to provide 330 new homes for DTES residents

B.C. to provide 330 new homes for DTES residents
Ravi Kahlon, who announced the new initiative at an afternoon news conference alongside Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim, said there are currently about 117 people living on East Hastings Street, 70 of whom have expressed a desire for housing.    

B.C. to provide 330 new homes for DTES residents

Two injured after shooting in Chilliwack, B.C.

Two injured after shooting in Chilliwack, B.C.
The RCMP say that police arrived and found two victims with multiple gun shot wounds. They say officers immediately provided first aid until Emergency Health Services arrived and transported the victims to hospital.

Two injured after shooting in Chilliwack, B.C.

Calgary house explosion leaves at least 10 injured

Calgary house explosion leaves at least 10 injured
Adam Loria, a spokesman for Calgary Emergency Medical Services, says all the people sent to hospital are adults. He says six people were in life-threatening condition and four received serious injuries.

Calgary house explosion leaves at least 10 injured

Charges laid in March 12th shooting incident

Charges laid in March 12th shooting incident
37-year-old Craig Truckle of Nanaimo and of no fixed address has been arrested in connection with the March 12th shooting which sent a 39-year-old man to hospital with serious injuries. At approximately 11 pm on Wednesday Truckle was arrested without incident in downtown Nanaimo by front line officers and taken into police custody.

Charges laid in March 12th shooting incident