Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Elizabeth Fry Challenging Decision To Deny It Standing At Saskatchewan Inquest

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Nov, 2015 12:03 PM
    SASKATOON — A group that helps women in the justice system is challenging a decision by a Saskatchewan coroner to bar it from taking part in an inquest.
     
    Kinew James died in January 2013 after she was found unresponsive in her cell at the federal Saskatoon Regional Psychiatric Centre.
     
    The Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies said other inmates reported at the time hearing James shouting for help and using a distress button in her cell.
     
    Kim Pate, the group's national executive director, said a coroner has ruled the group does not have a substantial interest in the inquest's outcome or in recommendations the jury might make.
     
    Pate says her group is seeking a judicial review of the decision.
     
    A Saskatchewan Justice spokesman says the ministry is looking at the request for a review.
     
    The spokesman also said in an email that standing has been granted to James's mother and the Correctional Service of Canada.
     
    "It was quite frankly shocking and I was quite flummoxed by the decision," Pate said from Ottawa on Friday.
     
    "It is vitally important for the Canadian public to know what happens within our institutions."
     
    James, 35, was serving time for manslaughter, assault, uttering threats, arson, mischief and obstruction of justice.
     
    Pate said the society had standing in an Ontario inquest into the death of Ashley Smith. The nineteen-year-old died in her cell at the Grand Valley Institution in Kitchener, Ont., in 2007 after wrapping a strip of cloth around her neck.
     
    Guards who were ordered not to intervene stood watch outside her cell.
     
    Most of Smith's final year was spent in segregation being shunted to different prisons, including the psychiatric centre in Saskatoon.
     
    Pate said the society worked with James for a number of years and has a direct interest in the inquest, which is to be held in January to determine what happened.
     
    "I think we have information that is germane to that," she said.
     
    "We are always working to try and prevent similar deaths in the future and so ... we have an ongoing and abiding interest in these issues."   

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. NDP Pledges Sweeping Energy Retrofits To Create Jobs, Save On Rate Hikes

    BURNABY, B.C. — Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan promises to give British Columbia a total energy retrofit if he's elected premier in 2017.

    B.C. NDP Pledges Sweeping Energy Retrofits To Create Jobs, Save On Rate Hikes

    #LEVELTHEFIELD: New Campaign Aims At Scoring Victory For Girls And Women In B.C. Sports

    #LEVELTHEFIELD: New Campaign Aims At Scoring Victory For Girls And Women In B.C. Sports
    ViaSport is taking aim at gender equity as it launches its #LEVELTHEFIELD campaign, encouraging broader participation in all sports in the province.

    #LEVELTHEFIELD: New Campaign Aims At Scoring Victory For Girls And Women In B.C. Sports

    Edmonton Youth Group Home At Centre Of Crime Controversy Closes Its Doors

    Edmonton Youth Group Home At Centre Of Crime Controversy Closes Its Doors
    The home, run by a charitable group known as E4C, made headlines in September when one of its residents, a 17-year-old girl, was charged with stabbing a man to death on a nearby street.

    Edmonton Youth Group Home At Centre Of Crime Controversy Closes Its Doors

    Toronto Police Say ‘No Doubt’ Attack On Muslim Woman ‘Hate-Motivated’

    Toronto Police Say ‘No Doubt’ Attack On Muslim Woman ‘Hate-Motivated’
    The attack came two days after a mosque in Peterborough, Ont., was set ablaze in the aftermath of last week's terrorist attacks in Paris that left 129 people dead.

    Toronto Police Say ‘No Doubt’ Attack On Muslim Woman ‘Hate-Motivated’

    New Report Says Food Bank Use On Rise With More Children, Seniors Users

    New Report Says Food Bank Use On Rise With More Children, Seniors Users
    The group wants to see the existing bureaucracies that oversee social benefits, such as disability payments, instead funnel all the savings into tax measures that would put more money into the hands of low-income earners.

    New Report Says Food Bank Use On Rise With More Children, Seniors Users

    Judge Dismisses Jury In 'Scud Stud' Defamation Trial Over Opening Remarks

    The judge said the opening statements by Arthur's Kent's lawyer were prejudicial and it would be unfair to continue after what the jurors heard.

    Judge Dismisses Jury In 'Scud Stud' Defamation Trial Over Opening Remarks