Female inmate dies after falling ill at Winnipeg Remand Centre - Action News
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Manitoba

Female inmate dies after falling ill at Winnipeg Remand Centre

Friends and loved ones of Hollie Hall, who died after contracting influenza or a flu-like illness while in custody at Winnipeg's Remand Centre, say they want to know why the Sagkeeng First Nation woman did not get medical help right away.

Woman received medical treatment at the centre before being admitted to hospital

Hollie Hall, 38, described by friends and family as a 'free spirit,' became ill while she was in custody at the Remand Centre. She died March 17. (Facebook)

Friends and loved ones of Hollie Hall, who died after contracting influenza ora flu-like illness while in custody at the Remand Centre in Winnipeg, say they want to know why shedid not get medical help sooner.

Hall, a 38-year-old from the Sagkeeng First Nation,had been in custody for about a month before she fell ill,family members and friends told CBC News. She died on March 17.

"Holliewas a good person and she should've gotthe care she needed right away," said Morgan Bruyere, 21, a second cousin and closefriend of hers.

"I couldn't say goodbye to her," she added, her voice cracking. "It's just sad she had to get taken away from me so soon."

Friends said Hallwas at the remand centrefor a breach of a no-contact order.

"When I heard that she was in the hospital, I was just praying for her to get better," said Hall's cousin,Erin Courchene.

"The next day they said, 'She's gone.'"

Admitted to hospital

Bruyere said Hall was living with her before she was arrested in late January, and they did notcommunicate with each other while she was in custody.

Hall had beenspitting up blood prior to her arrest, said Bruyere, who added that she urged Hall to see a doctor but she didn't.

She said she learned that Hall was in a medically induced coma at St. Boniface Hospital the day before she died, with doctors sayingshe had a bacterial infection in her blood.

A spokesperson for Manitoba's Justice Department saidHallreceived medical treatment at the remand centreand waslateradmitted to hospital, and family members were notified when her condition worsened.

Public health nurses are offering influenza vaccinations to others in custody, as a result of the death.

Manitoba Corrections is monitoring all correctional facilities for flu-like symptoms, according to the province.

It is not yet known how long Hallwas ill before she received medical care.

'She was full of love'

Hall's funeral was held Monday afternoon in Sagkeeng First Nation.

"She enjoyed fishing and was mechanically inclined.Holliehad an energy and [a] carefree, loving nature, and to all who met her, they became her extended family and lifelong friends," herobituary reads in part.

Bruyere described Hall as an outgoing, honest, caring and funny person who often talked about her daughter.

"She just really, really loved her daughter. That's all she talked about. She talked about family," Bruyere said.

"She was full of love and was just all and all a good person. So happy. She had lots of friends. She had lots of friends and family and I really loved her."

With files from the CBC's Erin Brohman