Ashley Smith's mother sees no accountability for daughter's death
Coralee Smith testifies in probe into New Brunswick teen's death in federal prison in Ontario
The Canadian Press
Posted: Feb 21, 2013 8:54 AM AT
Last Updated: Feb 22, 2013 7:37 AM AT
Ashley Smith's mother, Coralee Smith, testified Wednesday that her daughter's troubles didn't begin until her teens. (Michelle Siu/Canadian Press)The mother of a Canadian teenager who choked to death in her prison cell fought back back tears as she recalled how years of segregation appeared to diminish her daughter.
In a harrowing account of the last time she saw her daughter alive, Coralee Smith described her shock at Ashley's appearance during the visit in the summer of 2007.
"Oh, mom, my skin is all loose," Ashley told Smith through the Plexiglas screen that separated them.
"She was not a 19-year-old girl at that point; she was aged," an emotional Smith told an inquest jury. "She was a lot smaller."
Four guards at the Nova Institution for Women in Truro, N.S., had brought Ashley into the interview room, her mom recounted.
She was in handcuffs, shackles and dressed in a security gown aimed at preventing suicides. Her hair looked dirty.
Ashley had difficulty seeing out of it an injured eye — damage apparently from choking by tying ligatures around her neck.
"When you come home, we'll take you to an optometrist," Smith told her daughter.
Smith, 65, of Moncton, N.B., who travelled extensively to visit her daughter, said she never knew about Ashley's self-harming behaviour or lengthy segregation stints.
Asked what they talked about, Smith said "coming home."
At the end of the visit, Smith put her hand to the screen but Ashley — an afraid-of-the-dark homebody who normally liked to hold hands — appeared reluctant to follow suit.
"I watched them take her down the hall," Smith said. "It was the last time I saw Ashley alive."
A few months later, after yet another prison transfer, Ashley choked to death at the Grand Valley Institution in Kitchener, Ont. Guards, ordered not to intervene, stood by and watched
Five years on, Smith said, no one has been held responsible and nothing has changed for prisoners with mental-health issues.
"I still see no accountability. Ashley died on the floor. There was no help for her," Smith testified.
"Ladies and gentlemen, this was Canada. Inmates are allowed to take their own lives and, I say, with assistance because they stood around."
Outside coroner's court, Smith read a brief statement.
She said she had come voluntarily to testify, and challenged Don Head, commissioner of Correctional Service of Canada, and others in charge to do likewise.
"There are many more Ashleys out there," Smith said.
"There are other troubled youths and adults being tortured and being treated like they are not human beings — in Canada, today."
'She didn't commit suicide'
The inquest has heard how Ashley showed increasingly aberrant behaviour, including frequently choking herself.
Her daughter even asked her, in the days before she died, what a mother would think if her child committed suicide, Smith testified.
Still, Smith said she is convinced Ashley never meant to choke herself to death.
"I knew she didn't commit suicide," Smith said, fighting back tears. "Ashley was coming home."
Smith said a family should not have to fight for five years to get a thorough airing of what went so tragically wrong with her daughter, who spent most of the last three years of her life in segregation.
"We've only come to an inquest. There should have been an inquiry," she said.
"Who gives such orders? No one has stood up. The guards were there and they were hands on. Who passes the orders down?"
Smith noted the inquest only got going in earnest after Prime Minister Stephen Harper denounced Correctional Service of Canada for obstructing the hearings.
"What family would ever get the attention of the prime minister?" she said. "We chased it. So many people can't do that."
Smith suggested the need for a formalized intermediary, who could deal with concerns. She also pressed for better communications between prison authorities and inmates' relatives given her ignorance of what Ashley was going through.
Once she drove 14 hours from Moncton to Montreal to visit Ashley, but her daughter cancelled at the last minute — because she didn't want her mom to see her handcuffed and shackled.
Having missed calls from Ashley over a few days, Smith said she was carrying her phone at home with her on Oct. 19, 2007, in expectation of another call from her daughter.
A van pulled up.
"Two strangers met me at the end of the driveway. I had a feeling they were some religious group or the Salvation Army," Smith said.
"Are you Ashley Smith's mother?"
"Yes, I'm just waiting for a phone call."
"I'm sorry, I have to tell you that she passed away."
Mom won't accept Ashley's treatment
A distraught Smith called Eric Broadbent, a correctional manager at the prison where Ashley died.
Broadbent, who once promised Smith he would take good care of Ashley, was among managers who later berated guards for going into her cell to remove ligatures from her neck.
"I just couldn't believe: This was a man who said he'd take care of her," Smith said, who found out from media reports how Ashley had died.
The inquest has previously heard that Ashley, adopted as a three-day-old, was obsessed with her parentage, believing that her sister was in fact her biological mother.
Presiding coroner Dr. John Carlisle shut down a juror who asked Smith to elaborate on the issue.
Outside court, Smith said: "We are her family. We are not perfect. But we will never accept that Ashley should have been treated in this manner."
The inquest resumes Monday. The warden of Nova is scheduled to testify.
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- Woman charged with hiding newborn's body
- A 30-year-old New Brunswick woman has been charged in connection with the discovery of the body of a newborn boy found on Taylor Road near Monteagle, N.B. in 2009. more »
- Dennis Oland named as prime suspect in father's slaying
- Dennis Oland is considered the prime suspect in the killing of his father, Richard Oland, according to search warrants. more »
- Doctor loses legal fight over abortion policy
- A New Brunswick judge has ruled the labour board cannot conduct a hearing into whether the province's abortion policy is violating a doctor's ability to offer accessible health care. more »
- Environmental Trust Fund cash given to Perth-Andover
- Eligible New Brunswick community groups with "great projects" were denied money from the province's Environmental Trust Fund this year even as government took $4 million for its own use, Environment Minister Bruce Fitch acknowledged on Friday. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Senior Pakistani politician shot dead
- Gunmen in Pakistan have killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- The rescue attempt for two missing fishermen has been called off in New Brunswick, hours after one body was found. more »
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- About 50 to 60 people were injured after a driver described by witnesses as an elderly man drove his car into a group of hikers marching in a parade in a small Virginia mountain town. more »
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- A 20-year-old woman died Saturday during an event for Jeep enthusiasts held in a parking lot just west of downtown Edmonton. more »
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- Woman charged with hiding newborn's body
- Dennis Oland named as prime suspect in father's slaying
- Doctor loses legal fight over abortion policy
- 5 fishing boats burn in Tabusintac fire
- Alcohol, slippery road factors in fatal Tracadie car crash
- 'Everybody knew' Ashley Smith was in danger, guard says
- Environmental Trust Fund cash given to Perth-Andover
- Cohon challenges Maritimes to support new CFL team

