Wife pleads for justice at hearing into Errol Greene's death at Winnipeg Remand Centre - Action News
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Manitoba

Wife pleads for justice at hearing into Errol Greene's death at Winnipeg Remand Centre

The wife of a man who died while in custody last year repeated calls for answers Wednesday at a hearing in Winnipeg into her husband's death.

26-year-old father of 4 died after suffering epileptic seizures in custody last year

Errol Greene suffered two epileptic seizures and later died while in custody at the Winnipeg Remand Centre. An autopsy report revealed he was not given his epilepsy medication. (Submitted by Rochelle Pranteau)

The wife of a man who died while in custody last year repeated calls for answers at a hearing in Winnipeg Wednesday into herhusband's death.

Errol Greene, 26, died after suffering epileptic seizures at the Winnipeg Remand Centre on May 1, 2016. He suffered the attackduring a phone call with his wifeRochelle Pranteau, who was four months pregnant with their son at the time.

"My kids and I need answers for whyErroldied,"Pranteausaid in a statement.

Manitoba's office of the chief medical examiner confirmed in December it would conduct an inquest into Greene's death.

At the Wednesday hearing, Pranteau and officials with Manitoba Corrections, Winnipeg police, the Winnipeg Fire Paramedic Service and the John Howard Society were granted the right to testify at the inquest.

Pranteauis also suingthe provincial government, alleging it is responsible for failing to provide her husband with the necessities of life includingaccess to medication for epilepsy and that contributed tohis death.

'Avoidable death'

"This was an avoidable death," said CoreyShefman,Pranteau'slawyer.

In addition to probing the circumstances surrounding Greene's death, Shefman said he plans to question theManitoba Correctionspolicies that deprived Greene of his medication, as well as the "broken bail system."

Greene was arrested April 30, 2016, and placed in custody at the Winnipeg Remand Centre for breaching a court order that prohibited him from consuming alcohol.

Winnipeg lawyer Corey Shefman is representing Errol Greene's wife, Rochelle Pranteau. (Wendy Buelow/CBC)
He suffered two epileptic seizures during a phone conversation with his wife the next day and was eventually admitted to the Health Sciences Centre.

An autopsy report published by CBC News in October confirmed he died of internal bleeding. The report raised questions about how corrections officers dealt with Greene's medical emergency, noting they did not administer seizure-controlling medication to the father of four.

"It's shocking," Shefman said."When people go into prison, they are entirely at the mercy of the government, of the state. They don't have freedom, they don't have autonomy, and so they rely on the government to take care of them.

"Whenthegovernment doesn't put in place the necessary safety measures to present deaths, that's a problem."

Systemic racism?

Shefman said those safety concerns becomeeven more troubling when you considerthat the majorityof inmates behind bars in Manitoba aren't serving sentences and haven't yet been convicted of anything.

"Errol, when he was in jail, was not serving a sentence, was not guilty of a crime. He was there awaiting bail and that's like a majority of inmates in Manitoba," Shefman said.

Like Errol, over 70 per cent of Manitoba inmates identify as Indigenous. Shefman said he plans to shine a spotlight on that statistic during theinquest and the"systemic racism inherent in the criminal justice system."

Pranteausaid she hopes the inquest will shed light on the circumstances leading up to her husband'sdeath and get the family the "justice we need."

"We get barely any information from the remand centre and I'm afraid that this is going to happen again to another family," Pranteau said in a statement.

Five inmates, including Greene, died in 2016 at the remand centre, which houses about 300 people.

Errol Greene holds two of his four children. His son Errol Junior was born five months after his death. (Submitted by Rochelle Pranteau)