Ashley Smith inquest hears from corrections commissioner - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:06 AM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Ashley Smith inquest hears from corrections commissioner

The coroner's inquest into the death of inmate Ashley Smith continues with Correctional Service Canada chief Don Head taking the stand.

CSC Commissioner Don Head admits in hindsight, more could have been done in Smith's case

Ashley Smith was 19 when she choked to death in October 2007 at the Grand Valley Institution in Kitchener, Ont. (Canadian Press)

The coroner's inquest into the death of Ashley Smith continuedtoday with Correctional Service Canada (CSC) Commissioner Don Head taking the stand.

Head hadsecretly tried to have his summons quashed last month, arguing he had never met Smith and had no connection to the death of the 19-year-old from Moncton, N.B. The coroner refused, saying as head of the CSC, his testimony is important.

Smith, 19, choked to death on Oct. 19, 2007, after tying a piece of cloth around her neck while prison guards stood outside her cell and watched at Grand Valley Institution for Women in Kitchener, Ont. The guards say they had been ordered not to intervene.

At the time of Smiths death, Head was the deputy commissioner for CSC, though he was away on language training for a good portion of her stay.

Under cross examination by the Smith family's lawyer, Julian Roy, Head admitted Smith's name came up in 22 "situation reports" he saw. Head said he did not question this any further.

You were glancing at the references and 22 times in five months thats at least once a weekthere is somebody that keeps popping up over and over and over again. Is that right? And theres no way that could have escaped your notice, right?Roy asked Head.

You never asked a single question about what on earth is happening with 22 incidents of ligature use You never asked a single question about that?

He also pressed Head about why he never questioned the number of times Smith was transferred.Smith was transferred from institution to institution all across Canada. Through 2007, during her time in federal custody, she was transferred 17 times among eight institutions in four provinces.

Head responded, No. I did not get involved in the operations of it, no.

Head said in hindsight, there are better ways to deal with prisoners who suffer from mental illness.

Lessons learned

Roy questioned Head on CSC's position on how to respondto a prisoner in distress, citing Smith's suicide while guards stood by.

Head acknowledged in the case of medical distress it is,"safer to err on the side of caution and respond.

He also agreed there are more effective ways of disseminating information to CSC employees than just posting passively to an internal website.

Head said changes have, and continue to be, implemented to CSC policies in light of the Smith case, including:

  • Taking the time to properly debrief employees just beginning their shift.
  • Changes to training programs when it comes to dealing with prisoners diagnosed with mental illness.
  • More timely, streamlined, reportingon at-risk inmates.
  • Incorporating case studies into the training curriculum for CSC staff.
  • Ensuring qualified and experiencedstaff review incident reports.
  • Recognizing the need for interdisciplinary co-operation needed among those in the mental health field, parole officers, and other CSC staff.

Head also admitted that although some progress has been made since Smith died, there are still gaps in the system for inmates dealing with mental health issues.

Head said that there still is notraining in place to inform CSC employees about mental illness and self harm.

He told the jury at the inquest to make practical recommendations which can be implemented because, in terms of funding for CSC, he said there is no free pot of money.

This Saturday marks six years since Smith took her own life. At the time of her death, she was facing a six-year sentence mainly for charges incurred while in prison.