Halifax court hears powerful statements from family of Brick employee who died after accident
CBC
LaVerne David wept quietly in Halifax provincial court Thursday as she grappled with bitterness, the deepest of heartaches, and her struggle to forgive the treatment her family suffered after a workplace accident 3½ years ago that led to the death of her 47-year-old son.
She was seated in the first row of the public gallery for the sentencing hearing of furniture company The Brick, which was convicted in September of occupational health and safety charges linked to the death of delivery driver Martin David.
David, a father of four, died two days after a fall that fractured his skull on the morning of June 9, 2020, at a Brick location in the Bayers Lake business park on the outskirts of Halifax.
What his family has found so galling is that no one from The Brick called to tell them he'd been taken away by ambulance, and it was only 30 hours later that they were phoned by a Halifax hospital and learned he was in intensive care.
"My God tells me I must forgive, because if I don't forgive then he can't forgive me," LaVerne David said in an interview. "Somebody should have called one of us to let us know that Martin was in the hospital. That's the only thing we said from the beginning: 'Why wouldn't you call?'"
Martin David's father, Martin David Sr., said in an interview that no one from The Brick attended his son's funeral, or even sent a card.
It was the father who first contacted the Department of Labour, which had not been told by The Brick about his son's accident. The department subsequently launched an investigation and laid charges.
In court, Crown prosecutor Alex Keaveny argued The Brick should be sentenced to $215,625 in fines, and ordered to do four safety presentations. Defence lawyer Ron Pizzo suggested a fine in the range of $20,000.
In September, following a trial, Judge Elizabeth Buckle found The Brick guilty of three occupational health and safety charges, including two for failing to implement its policies around injury investigation and lighting, and one of failing to ensure the toilet area of the warehouse was properly illuminated.
David was found by a co-worker on the floor of the washroom, with his head in his arms. He was vomiting and not fully coherent. The court heard the co-worker thought David had become ill, and didn't realize he was injured. An ambulance was called and he was taken to hospital.
Buckle ruled the lights were off in the washroom at the time. There was no switch either inside or outside the washroom, and the lights were on a timer and had not come on yet. It was clear he'd fallen inside the washroom or in the darkened hallway outside.
While finding the company guilty of breaking health and safety regulations, Buckle later ruled the Crown had not proven that the lack of lighting had led to David's fall.
Earlier, David had fallen at a loading dock at the warehouse, but video surveillance indicated he did not hurt his head and he was able to continue working.
Martin David was Black, and his mother wrote in a victim impact statement presented to the court that "the power of the wealthy seems to rule the world."
A disgraced real-estate lawyer who this week admitted to pilfering millions in client money to support her and her family's lavish lifestyle was handcuffed in a Toronto courtroom Friday afternoon and marched out by a constable to serve a 20-day sentence for contempt of court, as her husband and mother watched.
Quebec mayor says 'one-size-fits-all' language law isn't right for his town where French is thriving
English is not Daniel Côté's first language but he says it's integral to the town he calls home.