Inquest classifies N.W.T. police shooting death undetermined
Yellowknife inquest lasted 8 days
CBC News
Posted: Mar 7, 2013 10:50 AM CST
Last Updated: Mar 7, 2013 10:17 PM CST
A Yellowknife Coroner's jury says Karen Lander’s cause of death is undetermined.
The inquest stems from a March 2012 standoff when three RCMP officers shot Lander four times after she came out of a Yellowknife home and pointed a rifle at police.
The jury said Lander died from gunshot wounds but the manner of her death was undetermined, as opposed to a suicide, homicide, or natural causes. The jury added that alcohol abuse, chronic depression, borderline personality disorder and suicidal ideation also contributed to her death.
The coroner’s inquest was called to classify death, and to make recommendations to prevent future similar deaths. It was not the jury’s role to lay blame in the death.
The jury also made 16 recommendations to Stanton Territorial Health Authority and physicians, the Yellowknife Health and Social Services Authority, the territorial government and RCMP.
The recommendations include more coordination between service providers and community organizations; ensuring family physicians receive information quickly when one of their patients has been to the emergency room threatening suicide; and having psychiatric nurses work in the emergency room with people threatening suicide.
Jury suggests more training for RCMP
The jury's verdict proposes more training for RCMP in the use of non-lethal weapons. It also recommends RCMP work with mental health professionals and family members during standoff situations.
A jury of four women and one man announced their decision at approximately 1 a.m. Thursday.
Their recommendations are not legally binding.
"The inquest as a whole has highlighted attention on the social issues that have confronted a number of northern residents," said Sheldon Toner, the coroner's counsel.
"The onus will be largely political for them to follow up on the recommendations, they will be accountable in the public eye for following through and hopefully they will do that."
Earlier in the day, Toner told the jury that classifying the manner of death could be their most difficult decision. He walked the jurors through the evidence presented during the seven days of testimony. Toner reminded the jury that several of Lander’s friends had talked about Lander being fixated on suicide. However, on the morning of the shooting, they said a key difference was that Lander was sober when she was threatening to hurt herself.
The scene on the Yellowknife street last March after the police shootout. (CBC)Toner also pointed out that Lander told a police negotiator five times that she would leave the house with an unloaded rifle.
Jury was cautioned about making assumptions
Medical professionals who testified said they felt Lander had borderline personality disorder, and with that comes impulsiveness. Jurors had to decide if Lander walked out toward police with a gun with intent, or whether she was acting impulsively. Toner said jurors couldn’t assume that because Lander said she wanted to die, that she intended to kill herself.
Before jurors made their decision, Toner suggested 12 recommendations. Lawyers for the police, the hospital and the government also weighed in about what they felt would be realistic recommendations.
Share Tools
Latest North News Headlines
- MMA fighter gets jail for assaulting ex-girlfriend
- A Yellowknife mixed martial arts fighter has been sentenced to four months in jail for assaulting his ex-girlfriend. more »
- Nunavut government is now less accountable, says professor
- A University of Toronto professor says the Nunavut government seems to be taking a step backwards when it comes to transparency and accountability, due to recent changes to the territory's Integrity Act. more »
- Arctic bacteria discovered breeding at record –15 C
- Bacteria that can live and multiply in High Arctic permafrost at temperatures well below the freezing point of water have been discovered by a Canadian-led team of researchers, offering clues about the types of organisms that might exist in similar extreme environments elsewhere in our solar system. more »
- Quebec Crees want foresting company's certificate revoked
- The Cree Regional Authority of Quebec wants a company's Forest Stewardship Council certification revoked after it says the company violated an agreement by clear-cutting an area of forest. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Harper 'not consulted' about Duffy Senate expense repayment

- Prime Minister Stephen Harper says that not only did he not know about his chief of staff's "gift" to repay Senator Mike Duffy's expenses before the story broke in the media, he was not consulted and did not sign off on Nigel Wright's decision to write a personal cheque. more »
- 2 infants confirmed among dead of Oklahoma tornado
- Rescue workers raced to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of 10 children. more »
- 'You will see him again in heaven,' Sharlene Bosma tells daughter
- Sharlene Bosma told more than 1,000 people at the public memorial service for her slain husband, Tim Bosma, about the love they shared. more »
- Mayor Ford stays silent while his brother defends him
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford continues to stonewall the media over allegations that he was recorded on video smoking what appears to be crack cocaine, but his brother Coun. Doug Ford told reporters Wednesday that the story is untrue. more »
- Yukon couple hold record for longest marriage in country
- Police search for missing Fort Resolution, N.W.T., woman
- Thieves nab stuffed wolves, lynx from Yellowknife business
- Daycare owner failed to prevent sex harassment, says tribunal
- 'Suicide contagion' spreads after schoolmate death
- Northerners struggle with new temporary foreign worker rules
- 2 climbers rescued off Yukon mountain after 5 days
- Iqaluit court prepares for re-trial of convicted murderer
- Search called off for missing Nunavut elder

