Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Winnipeg Woman Wants Inquest After Epileptic Husband Dies In Custody

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Aug, 2016 10:53 AM
    WINNIPEG — The wife of a man who died after suffering an epileptic seizure while in custody at the Winnipeg Remand Centre says facility staff denied her husband his epilepsy medication in the days leading up to his death.
     
    Rochelle Pranteau was on the phone with her 26-year-old common-law husband Errol Greene from the institution when he began slipping into a seizure May 1.
     
    "He said he could feel the numbing feeling in his hands, and his jaw started locking and grinding and then he could hardly talk," said Pranteau, 27, who has three children with Greene and is pregnant with a fourth. "Usually I can stop it when I'm face-to-face with him ... but because I wasn't there physically, I couldn't stop it.
     
    "I heard him fall, and then the phone dropped and was just dangling there."
     
    Pranteau said she listened helplessly for 20 minutes while guards and inmates responded.
     
    "I could hear (the guards) throw him on his stomach and put cuffs on him … You could tell he was struggling for his breath. He was on his stomach and it sounded like a guard was on him," said Pranteau. "They were trying to tell Errol to calm down, but how could he calm down? He's having his episode, let him have it."
     
    Manitoba Justice said Greene was taken to hospital where he died. The department is investigating.
     
    Greene was taken into custody the evening of April 29 for breaching a probation order not to consume alcohol. He had been out on bail awaiting trial for a mischief under $5,000 charge.
     
    Pranteau said Greene told her remand centre staff denied him his epilepsy medicine — which he took three times a day to ward off seizures — from the time he arrived at the institution.
     
    The president of the Manitoba Government and General Employees' Union, which represents remand centre staff, expressed sympathy to Greene's family and said the union will encourage its members to participate in the investigation.
     
    "I think it's important for everyone to withhold judgment on what happened until all the facts are known," said Michelle Gawronsky in a statement.
     
    A spokesperson for Manitoba Justice would not say whether Greene was refused his medication, citing privacy legislation, but said inmates sometimes need to see institutional doctors before medication is approved.
     
    "If the offender is on medication and it can be verified, generally it is continued. If the medication cannot be verified through community health-care providers or if there are any potential issues, the offender is booked to see the institutional physician," the department said in a statement.
     
    "A contract physician attends each business day. Offenders waiting to see the institutional physician may be monitored in a correctional centre medical unit if needed, based on their condition."
     
     
    The department wouldn't say whether Greene, who was arrested on Friday and died Sunday, was waiting until the next business day to see an institutional doctor.
     
    Pranteau is demanding an inquest to determine why her husband was not allowed to take his medicine and to find out exactly where and when he died. Inmates have told her paramedics pronounced Greene dead at the remand centre around 3 p.m., but officials told Pranteau he died several hours later in hospital.
     
    "So what is the story? Did he die at the hospital or did he die at the remand centre? It's not matching up," she asked. "I want to know what happened to him, every damn detail."
     
    Mark O'Rourke, director of the office of the chief medical examiner, said the investigation will determine whether an inquest will be held. An inquest is only mandatory when a person in custody dies "as a result of a violent act, undue means, or suddenly of unexpected cause," he said.
     
    "We're still in the process of investigating," he said. "It'll take us several months. When the report's done, we'll review our file and we'll be in a position to make a decision."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Terror Suspect Aaron Driver Dead After RCMP Confront Terror Threat In Strathroy, Ontario

    Terror Suspect Aaron Driver Dead After RCMP Confront Terror Threat In Strathroy, Ontario
    In February, Driver's lawyer and the Crown agreed to a peace bond stating there are "reasonable grounds to fear that he may participate, contribute directly or indirectly in the activity of a terrorist group."

    Terror Suspect Aaron Driver Dead After RCMP Confront Terror Threat In Strathroy, Ontario

    Supreme Court To Hear Extradition Case For Jassi Sidhu's Mother, Uncle Charged In India

    Supreme Court To Hear Extradition Case For Jassi Sidhu's Mother, Uncle  Charged In India
    Jaswinder (Jassi) Sidhu was stabbed to death in Punjab in June 2000; her mother, Malkit Kaur Sidhu, and uncle, Surjit Singh Badesha, are accused of murder and conspiracy in India.

    Supreme Court To Hear Extradition Case For Jassi Sidhu's Mother, Uncle Charged In India

    Delta, B.C. Police Seeking Witnesses In Fatal Motorcycle Collision

    Delta, B.C. Police Seeking Witnesses In Fatal Motorcycle Collision
    Tragically, the operator of the motorcycle, a 19 year old man from New Westminster, died at scene as a result of his injuries.

    Delta, B.C. Police Seeking Witnesses In Fatal Motorcycle Collision

    Judge Slams Kamloops, B.C., Homeowners For Ignoring Rules, Annoying Neighbours

    A judge has ordered major renovations be done to a lakeside property near Kamloops, B.C., that neighbours describe as a "monstrosity" and an "abomination."

    Judge Slams Kamloops, B.C., Homeowners For Ignoring Rules, Annoying Neighbours

    Toronto Mining Company Video Featuring Women In Bikinis Causes A Stir On Social Media

    Toronto Mining Company Video Featuring Women In Bikinis Causes A Stir On Social Media
    KWG creates video featuring young women in bikinis to promote Ring of Fire mining development

    Toronto Mining Company Video Featuring Women In Bikinis Causes A Stir On Social Media

    Pikachu Go Home - Alberta Lawsuit Says Unwelcome Visitors An Invasion Of Privacy

    A Canadian class action lawsuit has been filed against the creator of Pokemon Go on behalf of a property owner who says she's suffering from an invasion of privacy.

    Pikachu Go Home - Alberta Lawsuit Says Unwelcome Visitors An Invasion Of Privacy