After years of pushing for hearing, parents of B.C. logger found dead in his home testify at inquest - Action News
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British Columbia

After years of pushing for hearing, parents of B.C. logger found dead in his home testify at inquest

Gladys and Ed Scherbey have long argued that their son Corey was the victim of a homicide, not an accidental drug and alcohol overdose.

WARNING: This story contains graphic content

Corey Scherbey, pictured with his son Riley, was found dead in his Chilliwack, B.C., home in 2011. His parents say evidence pointing to a suspicious death were ignored. (Gladys and Ed Scherbey)

The parents of a Chilliwack, B.C., logger found dead in 2011 are testifying this week at a coroner's inquest into their son's death, after fighting for years to win thehearing.

Gladys and Ed Scherbey have long argued that their son Corey was the victim of a homicide, not an accidental drug and alcohol overdose.

The decomposing body of 38-year-old Corey Scherber was discovered by his mother at his homeon Aug.22, 2011.

On the first day of the inquest Monday, Gladys Scherbeydescribed how she first saw her dead sonkneeling in front of a leather sofa, his head buried in the pillows.

She told the coroner's jury that she somehow lifted the 194-pound man and laid him on the floor, where she saw a massive pool of dark blood or liquid.

"I ran out of the house screaming... someone has killed Corey, murdered, murdered, murdered," she said at the inquest, which will hear testimony from witnesses and experts.

Corey Scherbey's death was ruled accidental in 2014. (Gladys and Ed Scherbey)

Police initially investigated the case as a homicide, but abandoned that tackafter the coroner ruled the death an accidental overdose in 2014. The dead man's parentswent to court twice after the solicitor general refused to order an inquest.

In 2018 the RCMP issued a formal apology for how they investigated the death initially and two B.C. Supreme Court justices ordered the solicitor general's office to consider holding a formal inquest.

The inquest was scheduled for April 14, but delayed by the pandemic.

For close to a decade, the Scherbeyshave pointed tovarious inconsistencies at the death scene. An expert opinion they paid for suggested the body decomposed faster than normal, and that may point to foul play.

However, that 2016 report, which suggested it was more likely that their son was smothered, was not allowed as evidence at the inquest this week.

Presiding coroner Margaret Janzen ruled last Friday that Dr. Christopher Green's report and testimony could "potentially confuse the jury," adding that Green's medical expertise was primarily in radiology and neuroscience and he had no experience as a pathologist, forensic toxicologist or in dealing with sudden death investigations.

The Scherbeys offered a reward for information after their son died. They wanted information about a young woman in a leather jacket. She was the last person seen with their son. (Gladys and Ed Scherbey)

During her testimony on Monday, Gladys Scherbey said she'd never seen her son under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

Corey Scherbey worked as a logger securing cables around logs for removal. His mother described how he was an excellent cook and once spent a day makingborscht from scratch, and how he was always grateful when she brought him homemade food like perogies.

He left behind a 12-year-old son.

The first witness at the inquest also described the day the man's body was found.

Kevin McAlpine rented a basement suite inCorey Scherbey's house for $600 a month.

He said on the "stifling hot" day his landlord's body was found, he heard Gladys Scherbey screaming "Corey."He said he saw theroom where the body lay, which was littered with dead flies and filled with an"overwhelming" stench.

McAlpine said he and Scherbey occasionally drank a beer together or hung out. He described him as a great person to be around and a "gentle, teddy bear" of a man.

But McAlpine said sometimes Scherbey got high on cocaine and would shut his curtains and lock the door to avoid him.

McAlpine also described one instance when Scherbey invited a sex worker to his home and spent the day doing drugs with her, before they had an argument and he askedher to leave. Scherbeylater told him the sex worker had been paid for her services, but also wanted money for drugs that she'd brought and he'd consumed, McAlpine said.

Corey Scherbey's mother testified that she'd never seen her son under the influence of drugs or alcohol. (Gladys Scherbey)

The inquest continues into Thursday.

The jury in a coroner's inquest doesnot assign fault butcan make recommendations on how to prevent similar deaths in the future.