Hamilton

Coroner sets date for inquest into 6 deaths at Hamilton-Wentworth Detention Centre

An inquest into the deaths of six people who died while in custody at the Hamilton-Wentworth Detention Centre, or after transfer to hospital from the jail, will begin next month. On Friday, Dr. Karen Schiff, the regional supervising coroner for Hamilton and Niagara, announced the inquest will begin Nov. 25. It is expected to last 15 days and hear from about 15 witnesses, she said in a news release. 

Deaths at the Barton Street jail will be examined starting Nov. 25

A line of people on a sidewalk with picket signs.
In 2019, people beat drums and brandished signs outside the Hamilton-Wentworth Detention Centre to raise awareness about deaths in the jail. (Laura Howells/CBC)

An inquest into the deaths of six people who died while in custody at the Hamilton-Wentworth Detention Centre, or after transfer to hospital from the jail, will begin next month.

On Friday, Dr. Karen Schiff, the regional supervising coroner for Hamilton and Niagara, announced the inquest will begin Nov. 25. It is expected to last 15 days and hear from about 15 witnesses, she said in a news release. 

The inquest, which was announced in August, is mandatory under the Coroners Act and will examine the deaths of Jason Archer, Paul Debien, Nathaniel Golden, Igor Petrovic, Christopher Sharp, and Robert Soberal.

Inquests are mandatory when a death occurs while a person is in custody or being detained, except in circumstances where a death investigation determines the death occurred from natural causes, according to a government website. 

The deaths in question occurred between 2017 and 2021.

Stephanie Rea, a spokesperson for the Ministry of the Solicitor General, previously told CBC Hamilton the Office of the Chief Coroner can choose to examine deaths together "when it is believed that the deaths arose from the same event or a common cause."

On Oct. 21, the coroner's office is set to start a 15-day inquest into five deaths at the Niagara Detention Centre. In both inquests, juries may make recommendations aimed at preventing future deaths. 

Rea has also told CBC Hamilton inquests generally only occur after all other police or government investigations and prosecutions, and that they take time to prepare.

An industrial-looking brick building on a sunny day.
The exterior of the Hamilton-Wentworth Detention Centre seen in May 2019. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

In August, Cedar Hopperton, who leads the Barton Prisoner Solidarity Project, said she felt "mostly grief" after hearing about the inquests. The Hamilton detention centre is also known as the Barton Street jail. 

"I think what we've seen so far is a pattern of blaming prisoners for their own experiences when actually everybody who died in jail dies because of jail. So, I don't see a lot of the system actually taking responsibility. I see them just putting the responsibility back on prisoners."

Overcrowding and segregation can be "deadly," Hopperton said. 

Family members of people who've died in the prison, including Soberal, Archer, Debien and Sharp, have raised questions about the circumstances of their loved ones' deaths, and the quality of previous investigations into them.  

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Justin Chandler is a CBC News reporter in Hamilton. He has a special interest in how public policy affects people, and he loves a quirky human-interest story. Justin covered current affairs in Hamilton and Niagara for TVO, and has worked on a variety of CBC teams and programs, including As It Happens, Day 6 and CBC Music. He co-hosted Radio Free Krypton on Met Radio. You can email story ideas to justin.chandler(at)cbc(dot)ca.

With files from Desmond Brown, Dan Taekema, Laura Howells and Adam Carter