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OTTAWA/QUEBECEDITION ■ THURSDAY,AUGUST1,2019 ■ GLOBEANDMAIL.COM
RCMP are scaling back their
search for two men wanted in
the killings of three people in
British Columbia after nine days
of scouring the northern Manito-
ba wilderness.
In the small communities of
Gillam and Fox Lake Cree Na-
tion, where dozens of police offi-
cers descended into the streets
and surrounding forests in
search of Bryer Schmegelsky and
Kam McLeod, residents were un-
sure what to make of the police
retreat.
With no confirmed sign of the
homicide suspects in more than
a week, many aren’t sure wheth-
er they will be able to return to
their old routines and allow their
children to play freely.
“It would be nice to know
what happened to them, wheth-
er they are dead, whether we
don’t have to lock our doors any
more,” Gillam resident Joyce Ir-
win said.
Mr. Schmegelsky, 18, and Mr.
McLeod, 19, haven’t been spotted
since the evening of July 22,
when the grey Toyota RAV4 they
are believed to have been driving
was found burning in a ditch
near Fox Lake Cree Nation.
They are suspects in the
shooting deaths of American
Chynna Deese, 24, and her 23-
year-old Australian boyfriend
Lucas Fowler, whose bodies were
found near Liard Hot Springs,
south of the B.C.-Yukon bounda-
ry, on July 15.
And they are charged with
second-degree murder in the
death of Vancouver resident Leo-
nard Dyck, 64, a lecturer at the
University of British Columbia’s
botany department.
MANHUNT, A
RCMPscale
backmanhunt
forfugitives
wantedin
B.C.killings
RENATAD’ALIESIOGILLAM,MAN.
IANBAILEYVANCOUVER
The Ontariogovernment paid
$40,000 for the search that led to
the hiring of Premier Doug
Ford’s friend, Toronto Police Su-
perintendent Ron Taverner, as
the province’s top police officer –
an appointment that was later
aborted amid allegations of cro-
nyism.
Records obtained by The
Globe and Mail through the Free-
dom of Information Act show
that a “flat fee rate” of $40,
was paid to Odgers Berndtson,
the recruiting firm contracted to
help find a new commissioner of
the Ontario Provincial Police in
the fall of 2018.
An investigation by Ontario’s
Integrity Commissioner later
found that although the Premier
did not improperly intervene in
the hiring of Supt. Taverner, the
process was “flawed.”
The probe heard evidence
that Supt. Taverner’s name was
not included on an initial list of
30 candidates and that a key
member of the two-person hir-
ing panel, then-secretary of the
cabinet Steve Orsini, was sup-
plied with Supt. Taverner’s name
by Dean French, Mr. Ford’s then-
chief of staff.
The probe also found text
messages – which the Integrity
Commissioner described as “dis-
concerting” – that showed Mr.
Orsini knew Mr. French was
“rooting for Mr. Taverner’s suc-
cess.”
TAVERNER, A
Ontariopaid
$40,000for
searchthatled
tohiringof
Ford’sfriend
GREGMcARTHUR
PatriciaHoudewipesawaytearswhilelisteningtothepublicinquiry’sreportonWednesday.
Hermother-in-law,HelenMatheson,waskilledbynurseElizabethWettlauferin2011.
FREDLUM/THEGLOBEANDMAIL
A failure to imagine that a trusted
nurse could become a serial killer
within the Ontario health-care sys-
tem allowed Elizabeth Wettlaufer’s
crimes to go undetected, a public in-
quiry has concluded.
Pointing fingers at anyone other
than Ms. Wettlaufer – who was sen-
tenced to life in prison in 2017 after
she pleaded guilty to murdering
eight of her nursing-home patients –
would not fix the “systemic vulnera-
bilities” that let Ms. Wettlaufer clan-
destinely inject seniors with lethal
doses of insulin, Commissioner Ei-
leen Gillese said.
As a result, Justice Gillese, a mem-
ber of the Court of Appeal for Onta-
rio, elected not to make any findings
of “individual misconduct” against
the players in the province’s long-
term care system who might have
prevented Ms. Wettlaufer’s murders.
“Itappearsthatnooneinthelong-
term care system conceived of the
possibility that a health-care provid-
er would intentionally harm those
withintheircare,”JusticeGillesesaid
assheunveiled91recommendations
designed to protect residents of On-
tario’s 626 nursing homes.
“Ifyoudon’tconceiveofthepossi-
bility, you don’t look for it and you
don’t take steps to prevent it,” she
said.
Ms. Wettlaufer, now 52, confessed
in the fall of 2016 to murdering eight
of her patients and trying to kill sev-
eral others over nine years while
workingforfourdifferentemployers,
includingtheCaressantCarenursing
home in Woodstock and Meadow
Park nursing home in London.
She pleaded guilty to eight counts
of first-degree murder, four of at-
tempted murder and two of aggra-
vated assault. She confessed to kill-
ing a ninth patient after the inquiry
began, but police elected not to pur-
sue charges in that case.
Justice Gillese unveiled her nearly
1,500-page, four-volume final report
at a hotel in Woodstock packed with
relatives and friends of Ms. Wettlauf-
er’s victims.
WETTLAUFER,A
Inquirysaysnoindividualtoblame
forfailuretostopWettlaufer’skillings
Reportonmurdersofeightseniorsovernineyearsconcludesthatnoonein
long-termcaresystemcouldimaginethattrustednursewouldkillpatients
KELLYGRANT
HEALTHREPORTER
ECONOMY
U.S.FederalReserve
lowersinterestrates
forthefirsttime
since2008 B
HEALTH
Moreyoungadults
diagnosedwith
colorectalcancer,
Canadiandatashow A
FILMFESTIVAL
TIFF’sCanadianlineup
isamixoffamiliarfaces
andfreshrookies,Barry
Hertzwrites A
E
lizabeth Wettlaufer, a rogue
nurse, made countless medi-
cation errors, routinely stole
drugs to feed her addiction,
murdered at least eight vulnerable
patients and tried to kill a handful of
others under her charge in long-
term care homes.
Despite being an incompetent
employee who racked up com-
plaints, she never wanted for work,
received positive letters of recom-
mendation when employers wanted
to be rid of her and, despite multiple
red flags, never would have been
caught had she not confessed to the
killings. (Ms. Wettlaufer killed the
patients, aged 75 to 96, by giving
them overdoses of insulin, a drug
that is commonly used in the long-
term care setting.)
And it’s nobody’s fault.
Nobody’s damn fault.
There were no acts of “individual
misconduct” by employers, supervi-
sors, union reps, Ministry of Health
inspectors, nursing regulatory bod-
ies, coroners and so on. The litany of
screw-ups was due to “systemic vul-
nerabilities.” All the failings that al-
lowed murders, and lord knows
what other abuse to happen, were
apparently not the failings of people
- they were attributable to the
dreaded, amorphous, anonymous,
responsibility-free system.
PICARD,A
Thesystemfailedtopreventeightmurders.
Theinquiryfailedbynotholdinganyoneaccountable
ANDRÉPICARD
OPINION
[CRIME]