2 guards charged with manslaughter in New Brunswick prisoner's death

in canadaprisons •  7 years ago 

Matthew Hines was beaten and pepper-sprayed by guards at Dorchester Penitentiary before his 2015 death
matthew_hines.jpg
Police have laid criminal charges against two New Brunswick correctional officers in the death of prisoner Matthew Hines at Dorchester Penitentiary more than two years ago.
Alvida Ross, 48, and Mathieu Bourgoin, 31, have both been charged with manslaughter and criminal negligence causing death, RCMP announced Wednesday. It's not yet clear whether either officer is still on duty.
Ross and Bourgoin were working at the prison on May 27, 2015, when the Cape Breton man was beaten and repeatedly pepper-sprayed by correctional officers.
New Brunswick RCMP initially investigated Hines's death and deemed that no foul play occurred.
The investigation was transferred to Nova Scotia RCMP after "additional information came forward" in May 2016.
It's not clear what kind of information changed the RCMP's mind.
Family waited 'far too long' for truth
Last year, federal correctional investigator Ivan Zinger released a scathing report into Hines's death, describing the prison's investigation as "flawed" and "self-serving."
Zinger found that CSC ordered bloodstains to be cleaned after Hines's death, "compromising the preservation of a potential crime scene."
"In this case, given the catastrophic breakdown in the staff response, it is appropriate to review and question the adequacy and appropriateness of CSC staff investigating and disciplining itself," Zinger wrote.
CSC apologized to Hines's family after Zinger's investigation, and for the first time, acknowledged that Hines's death was preventable.
The correctional service has also said there was "staff misconduct" involved in Hines's death.
Two guards were given reprimand letters, while a manager received a reprimand letter and lost one day's worth of pay.
It's not clear whether Ross and Bourgoin were among the employees who were disciplined.
Pepper-sprayed and beaten
At first, Correctional Service Canada told the public that Hines was "found" in need of medical attention and staff performed CPR on him.
Neither of those things were true, a CBC News investigation found.
Hines was beaten and repeatedly pepper-sprayed, dying less than two hours after his encounter with guards began.
It started after Hines refused to return to his cell at Dorchester, where he was serving a sentence for bank robbery.
He appeared to be "confused" and was "physically unco-operative." His family believes he was having a mental health emergency.
Less than a minute later, guards began using force on Hines.
One guard struck him with a closed hand twice, while another delivered an open-handed hit to Hines's head and two knee strikes to his right side.
As they restrained Hines on the floor, he was pepper-sprayed for the first time.
Minutes later, 10 correctional officers escorted Hines toward the administrative segregation unit.
Even though he was "sufficiently under control of staff," Hines was pepper-sprayed in the face four more times by one guard, with only seconds between each burst.
'Please, I'm begging you'
Officers took Hines to a decontamination shower to wash off the pepper spray.
With his hands in cuffs and his shirt pulled over his head, Hines slipped and fell on his back, hitting his head on the wall.
"In his state, the sensation could conceivably feel like waterboarding," Zinger wrote in his report.
As he lay on the prison shower floor, Hines told guards he couldn't breathe. He pleaded with them.
"Please, please," Hines said. "I'm begging you, I'm begging you."
Guards turned the water back on.
Hines stopped moving, before having the first of three possible seizures.
He was pronounced dead just after midnight on May 27, 2015.
Nurse didn't provide any treatment
Despite his pleas for help, the nurse on duty at the prison that night "failed to conduct any assessments" on Hines or perform any "life-saving treatment," such as CPR.
She no longers works for CSC, but records show she is still registered as a nurse in New Brunswick.
CSC apologized for providing incorrect information to the public, but has never explained how or why it happened.
Ross and Bourgoin, both from Dieppe, N.B., will appear in Moncton provincial court on Feb. 26.

Karissa Donkin
CBC News
Jan 03, 2018

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