Help should have come for man who died in Manitoba RCMP holding cell, inquest hears
CBC
One of the top Mounties in Manitoba's north district testified Tuesday that policies were missed, and a 54-year-old who died in an RCMP holding cell should have gotten help during his final moments.
Insp. Christopher Massart, assistant district officer for Manitoba's North District, testified at the inquest into John Ettawakapow's death that intervention was needed when another detainee's leg fell on Ettawakapow's neck in a holding cell in 2019.
"It should have been noticed and help should have been asked for," Massart under questioning by Crown attorney Ben Wickstrom, who is acting as inquest counsel.
Ettawakapow died on Oct. 6, 2019, after being arrested in The Pas, Man., for public intoxication. He was carried into a cell at 7:10 p.m. and left lying on the floor of a holding cell. Two other men were also in the cell, lying on the floor.
Video played in court Monday showed that at 8:13 p.m., one of the men moved and put his leg over Ettawakapow's neck, where it stayed for 40 minutes. During that time, no physical checks were made by the guard on duty, the video shows.
That goes against RCMP policy, which requires physical checks every 15 minutes, said Massart.
"Ideally, physical checks would be done as per our policies, every 15 minutes, and that is a physical, visual check at the cell," he said. "They open the slide and look through the window and check for breathing."
Instead, the video shows Ettawakapow lifting his arm a few times, grabbing toward his neck before all movement stops.
It was not until 1:30 a.m. that someone is seen physically checking Ettawakapow. By then, the inquest heard, it was too late.
CBC first told Ettawakapow's story in 2021, as part of its death in custody project. It found that he was just one of dozens of Canadians who have died in custody after being arrested for public intoxication.
The inquest into Ettawakapow's death was called in accordance with Manitoba's Fatalities Inquiries Act, which requires an inquest whenever a person dies in police custody.
The civilian guard on duty when Ettawakapow was brought in testified that she was trained to switch between physically checking on detainees every 15 minutes and monitoring the security cameras.
Rebecca MacDonald told court she "didn't think it was the best way to observe people."
MacDonald said because of a high-priority call that occupied RCMP officers, she was the only person on duty in the cell area after Ettawakapow was brought in.