Friday, December 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Coroner's Jury Set To Mull Evidence In Deaths Of Autistic Boy, Mom

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Oct, 2015 11:23 AM
    PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. — Members of a coroner's jury are scheduled to begin deliberating later today the deaths of a Prince Rupert, B.C., mother and her severely autistic son.
     
    Thirty-nine-year-old Angie Robinson killed her herself on April 3, 2014, after taking the life of her 16-year-old son Robert.
     
    The week-long coroner's inquest into their deaths heard from 27 witnesses and wrapped up yesterday. 
     
    Tracy Beynon of the Ministry of Children and Family Development says workers knew about domestic abuse in the home and suicide attempts by the mother but failed to intervene.
     
    She says workers discussed whether Angie should live in a women's shelter but were unable to provide adequate care for Robert.
     
    Beynon says she had three interactions with Angie in 2013, but none was in person, the ministry received nine reports about incidents of child-safety protection, but closed the mother's case that December because there were no new events.
     
    Dr. Evan Adams of the First Nations Health Authority says jurors must address inequalities in the health-care system.
     
    "It does absolutely sound like this family fell through the cracks, and they didn't receive the kinds of services that would have been helpful to them," says Adams. 
     
    "What were the entry points that she, the mom, and the rest of the family, and her extended family, how could they have introduced them into the health system? 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Railway Drama: CN Accuses Former Employee Of Taking Corporate Secrets To CP

    A lawsuit launched by Canadian National Railway alleges a former employee shared confidential client information with rival Canadian Pacific, which then wooed business away in a made-in-Canada corporate espionage scheme.

    Railway Drama: CN Accuses Former Employee Of Taking Corporate Secrets To CP

    Ottawa Will Consult With Manitoba First Nations Following Court Ruling: Harper

    Ottawa Will Consult With Manitoba First Nations Following Court Ruling: Harper
    Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the federal government will not appeal a court ruling over land being claimed by some Manitoba First Nations.

    Ottawa Will Consult With Manitoba First Nations Following Court Ruling: Harper

    Nine Crew Members From Fishing Boat Rescued From Arctic Waters

    Nine Crew Members From Fishing Boat Rescued From Arctic Waters
    Nine crew members from a Newfoundland fishing boat have been rescued from Arctic waters off Baffin Island.

    Nine Crew Members From Fishing Boat Rescued From Arctic Waters

    Manitoba First Nations Children's Advocate Fasting To Protest Child Welfare

    Manitoba First Nations Children's Advocate Fasting To Protest Child Welfare
    Manitoba's First Nations children's advocate has set up teepees on the lawn of the legislature for a fast to draw attention to the province's "broken" child welfare system.

    Manitoba First Nations Children's Advocate Fasting To Protest Child Welfare

    Final Arguments In Trial Of Montreal Teen Facing Terror-Related Charges

    Final Arguments In Trial Of Montreal Teen Facing Terror-Related Charges
    Closing arguments are scheduled to take place today in the case of a Montreal teen who faces terrorism-related charges linked to a robbery.

    Final Arguments In Trial Of Montreal Teen Facing Terror-Related Charges

    Alberta Researchers Say Discovery Could Be 'Game Changer' For Diabetic Research

    The new pathway was found after researchers examined pancreatic cells from 99 human organ donors.

    Alberta Researchers Say Discovery Could Be 'Game Changer' For Diabetic Research