Alex Gervais's family calling for inquiry into troubled teen's death - Action News
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Alex Gervais's family calling for inquiry into troubled teen's death

The family of Alex Gervais says the teen who died while in provincial care was "a lamb to slaughter" while in the province's care.

Family of teen who died while in provincial care says the system let him down

Metis teen Alex Gervais died after he jumped from the open window of a hotel in Abbotsford while in xyolhemeylh's care. (Dylan Pelley/Facebook)

Friends and family of Alex Gervais, who died while in provincial care, are angry about the circumstances around his death and are calling for an inquiry into the matter.

People close toGervaissay they're upsetthat the 18-year-oldwas left alonein an Abbotsford, B.C.,hotel for three months, beforehe fell or jumped from a fourth-floor window on Sept. 18.

An adult whoGervais often turned to for advice(and has requested anonymity) shared texts with CBC News that Gervais wrote.

A person close to Alex Gervais shared texts with CBC News that the teenager sent while in provincial care.

In his texts, Gervaissaidhis social workers wouldn't listen to him, wouldn't help him and wouldn't give him money. He also said a friend had robbed him.

"I tell the social workers too(sic) help me and they do nothing, he doesn't feed me he's never around," said Gervais in the text.

"I have been over and over again not acknowledged for what I am trying too (sic) say. I am telling you think hoping you can give me some advice."

The person asked him if he would want to move out on his own and no longer be in government care.

"Honestly not really," Gervaissaid. "I'm not doing very well."

'Lamb to slaughter'

Gervais's family outlined several of their concerns in an open letter to the premier, which was sent in advance to CBC News.

In the letter,framed as a conversation the family would have with Gervais if he was still alive, the familyallegesthe province placed Gervais in his father's care, "despite the fact that the court knew about the abuse inflicted uponyou."

Text messages Alex Gervais sent while living alone in a hotel say he didn't receive help from the province.

"That was the turning point. That was when you essentially became a lamb to slaughter," wrote the family.

"From that point until the moment of your death, you remained a pawn in a system thatplaces no true value on the life of a child."

CBC News tried to reach Gervais's father, but he did not respond to requestsfor comment.

The family said it often lost track of Gervaisbecause he moved homes 16 times.

"Alex, it is important for you to know that we did care, but we often lost track of you in theinfamous bureaucratic system," said the family in the letter.

The letter goes on to say that Gervais didn't receive thegifts the family sent to him, and that those he did get were stolen.

"Your short life, Alex, was fraught with physical, sexual and psychological pain, permittedto be inflicted upon you by the same people who were supposed to be protecting you."

Troubled childhood

CBC News has also learned more about Gervais's troubled childhood from his aunt, Line Decarie, who came to Abbotsford from Quebec to attend his funeral last weekend.

Line Decarie, the aunt of Alex Gervais, says she tried, unsuccessfully, to adopt the vulnerable youth. (CBC)

Decarie also said Gervais's father was abusive. She said he threw Gervais down a set of stairs when he was young, and later took him to B.C. Decarieadded that Gervais' father lost custody of him several times.

She saidher sister, Gervais's mother, suffers from schizophreniaand that his parents met in a mental health facility in Quebec.

She said her family tried to adopt Alex eight years ago, but B.C. social workers wouldn't agree to her one stipulation.

"The condition was because of the danger the father posed to myself and to my son. I didn't want Alex's father to know where he was," said Decarie.

"Unfortunately they couldn't do that because of all these parental rights. They wanted his father to stay in contact and at that point I was too afraid to put my own child at risk."

Gervais's aunt also said she was angry that social workers didn't contact her when his group home was shut down last spring.

Decariesaid she visited the group home when she was here and believes officials were too hasty when they closed 23 group homes run by one company.

She and many others who knew Alex say he was doing well there, and he should never have been put in a hotel,alone for months.

The province said it couldn't comment on details of Gervais's files or Decarie's failed adoption attemptsdue toprivacy concerns.

The Ministry of Children and Family Development did sayit is B.C. policy to involve extended family in a child's care.

"Ministry policy and practice is to place children and youth in foster homes and residential resources that match their needs and minimize the possibility of further moves," said the ministry in a written statement.

The ministry said the provincial director of child welfare has launched a case review to examine if provincial policy was properly followed when Gervais was placed in a hotel.

With files from Natalie Clancy