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Sagkeeng First Nation chief demands answers after man injured in custody at Headingley jail dies

A man from Sagkeeng First Nation is dead after an incident involving corrections officers at Headingley Correctional Institution.

William Walter Ahmo, 45, was in custody and seriously injured Feb. 7

After an altercation in Headingley Correctional Institute in Feb. 2021, William Walter Ahmo was found unconscious, and died a week later.
William Walter Ahmo died in February 2021 after an altercation with corrections officers at Manitoba's Headingley Correctional Centre. (Submitted by Darlene Ahmo)

The chief of Sagkeeng First Nation is demanding answers after a community member died following an incident involving corrections officers at Headingley Correctional Institution.

William Walter Ahmo, 45, was unresponsive and taken to hospital on Feb.7 with serious injuries after what police have so far only described as an "incident" with the jail's corrections officers that evening.

According to the chief of Sagkeeng First Nation, Ahmo was in the intensive care unitat the Health Sciences Centre for a week and died Sunday night.

"We need to know what happened. And very important that we to get to the bottom of it. Because we'll continue to talk about these situations if nothing is done. To resolve situations like this when people are under the care of other people," said Chief Derrick Henderson of Sagkeeng First Nation, who has been supporting the family.

He said Ahmo had been under guard by corrections officers while hospitalized.The family was not able to come to the bedside until the nighthe died,he added, due to COVID-19 restrictions.

RCMP Major Crimes Unit, along with RCMP forensic identification and Headingley RCMP are investigating.

The exterior of a jail during winter.
William Walter Ahmo, who was seriously injured after in an incident with Corrections Officers at Headingley Correctional Institution on Feb. 7, has now died. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Henderson said he wants to know all the details of what happened.

"I think it's really sad that our people are faced with these kind of situations. And the sad thing is if [people] are under the watch of correctional people and then this incident happens, you know, who'sthere watching for these people when these kinds of things happen? That's what's really concerning right now. Very concerning."

He said the family, who is well known in the community, is "devastated."

"We're talking about a human being here. We're talking about an individual. A father, son, relative of this family. And that's what we have to look at ... We have to look at the family and the individual as a human being."

Henderson said he and the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefsare supporting the family in calling for transparency during the investigation and an inquiry into Ahmo's death.

"The Sagkeeng First Nation Government is committed to supporting William's family now in the time of their terrible grief and hereafter in order to ensure that all of the facts of this matter are disclosed and that justice is done," he wrote in a statement.

Police previously saidthe nature of the incident is not yet clear, and that more information will be provided when it becomes available.

CBChas reached out to Manitoba Justice for comment.

Man injured in custody at Headingley jail dies

4 years ago
Duration 1:18
William Walter Ahmo was unresponsive and taken to hospital on Feb. 7 with serious injuries after what police have so far only described as an "incident" with the jail's corrections officers that evening.