Inquest won't give Stephens family 'solace,' says new lawyer in Summerside police shooting suit
CBC
A coroner's inquest is no longer a top priority for an Island family that's suing Summerside police and Health P.E.I. over a shooting death five years ago, says their new lawyer.
The family of Jeremy Stephens had long been demanding an inquest to better understand what happened the night he was shot to death by Summerside police officers in Prince Edward Island's second-biggest city.
"An inquest — if and when it takes place — it's not going to give them much in the way of solace," said Lawrence Greenspon, who signed on as lawyer for the Stephens family last month.
"It's now been five years. What happens to the family, quite understandably… they become skeptical and eventually cynical."
A police watchdog agency, Nova Scotia's Serious Incident Response Team (SIRT), took less than a year to clear Summerside police of any criminal wrongdoing related to the May 27, 2018 shooting. The team concluded police officers were justified in using lethal force as they tried to arrest Stephens in the darkened basement of a Duke Street house in the early-morning hours.
Police believed Stephens was armed with a knife, and they were aware of his violent criminal record and drug-related mental health issues.
Stephens died in Prince County Hospital later that same day, at the age of 32.
The City of Summerside was in the midst of a planned power outage for several hours that spanned both the shooting and the period when Stephens was taken to hospital and treated for eight gunshot wounds.
The family is suing Summerside police, Health P.E.I. and three doctors at Prince County Hospital for $6 million.
The family's new Ottawa-based lawyer has a reputation for taking on difficult and contentious criminal and civil cases.
Greenspon has represented Tamara Lich, a leader of the Ottawa truckers convoy; Canadian families of alleged ISIS members; and Joshua Boyle, a former Afghan hostage who faced criminal charges in Canada.
Islanders might remember the lawyer from his representation of P.E.I. Senator Mike Duffy in the 2013-15 expenses scandal and Duffy's subsequent lawsuit against the Senate of Canada.
Greenspon has also represented other families of victims of fatal police shootings.
"It's a problem that we see systematically right across the country ... police's inappropriate dealing with people who have mental health issues," Greenspon told CBC News in an interview.
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.