logo

Judge says 2011 Edmonton prison killing remains 'suspect,' recommends public inquiry

CBC28-03-2025

Justice Donna Groves concludes circumstances of Mason Montgrand's death 'a matter of public concern'
After more than a decade, two police investigations and several probes of staff conduct at Edmonton's maximum security prison, a judge says it's still unclear exactly what led to Mason Tex Montgrand's death in custody.
In yet another look at the case through a fatality inquiry, Justice Donna Groves is recommending a broader public inquiry, concluding the circumstances of the killing on Aug. 16, 2011, "remain suspect."
"I find that the circumstances surrounding the death of Montgrand is a matter of public concern," the judge wrote in her final report, released this month.
Groves noted there was significant information that was withheld from her inquiry, making it difficult to issue "any meaningful recommendations" aimed at preventing similar deaths.
Without a full picture of the situation, "Circumstances like those surrounding the death of Montgrand would require an inquiry that goes beyond the limited and restricted scope of a fatality inquiry," she said.
That includes the possibility of an investigation to fully explain why the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service (ACPS) chose not to lay charges that the Edmonton Police Service wanted to pursue.
Montgrand was 21 when he was fatally stabbed at the Edmonton Institution on Aug. 18, 2011.
No one has ever been held criminally responsible in his death.
Another inmate, Lance Regan, was charged with first-degree murder a few days after the killing.
By 2016 — five years after he was charged — Regan still hadn't gone to trial. The case became the first murder charge in Alberta to be stayed under the Supreme Court's Jordan decision, which sets a 30-month ceiling for the period between laying charges and the start of a superior court trial.
The Court of Appeal of Alberta overturned the stay, ordering a new trial in early 2018. But in October of that year, the Crown quietly stayed the murder charge against Regan again, effectively dropping the case.
Judge questions conclusions of CSC investigation
The fatality inquiry, held nearly 14 years after Montgrand's death, heard that he and Regan were members of rival gangs. Correctional Service of Canada (CSC) staff were advised several months before Montgrand's death that the groups were "at war" with each other.
Groves's report says on the day of the killing, two correctional staff members decided Regan and Montgrand, who were being held in cells directly next to each other, could be let out at the same time to shower.
Video surveillance caught Regan going into Montgrand's cell and attacking him when he returned. A weapon was never recovered.
Fatality inquiries are prohibited from making findings of legal responsibility, which Groves stresses in her examination of the case.
But she raises concerns about how federal prison authorities handled the incident.
Her report says an Edmonton Institution correctional officer claimed Regan and Montgrand had made multiple previous requests to be allowed out together. But there was no written documentation showing that happened, apart from statements written by two other officers, two days after the stabbing.
An internal CSC board of investigation determined in 2011 that Montgrand and Regan's gang affiliations didn't contribute to the incident, saying they had a "lengthy personal history" because they grew up in the same area, and had asked to be out of their cells together.
But Groves said the lack of any evidence of those requests from before Montgrand's death "should have sounded an alarm to the board."
Additionally, she said it's since been proven that the pair did not grow up together.
"I am uncertain where the board acquired this inaccurate information."
Police investigate alleged 'fight club'
After the first homicide investigation in 2011, police reviewed Montgrand's death a second time in 2017.
It was part of a massive investigation EPS called "Project Max," prompted by the former head of the CSC reporting alleged criminal offences at the Edmonton Institution.
Among the allegations was a "fight club" inside the prison where guards directed or allowed inmates to assault each other. An EPS investigator was tasked with examining whether one or more correctional officers orchestrated Montgrand's homicide by purposely letting him out of his cell with an "incompatible" inmate, the report said.
The fatality inquiry heard that in April 2018, EPS recommended that a correctional manager and two correctional officers be charged with murder and criminal negligence causing death in relation to Montgrand's case.
The correctional manager still works for CSC at another institution, according to Groves's report. The two officers are no longer employed with CSC.
The Crown declined to pursue the charges — a decision EPS challenged twice, asking the executive director of specialized prosecutions for a review, then escalating it again to the province's ACPS division assistant deputy minister.
"In our view, the evidence meets the threshold of a 'reasonable likelihood of conviction' and the public interest clearly favours the prosecution of charges for this incident," then-interim EPS chief Kevin Brezinski wrote to the government official.
But each time, the decision was not to prosecute, citing insufficient evidence for a conviction.
Regan was later among five Edmonton Institution inmates who sued prison guards, the warden and the federal government, alleging abuse.
The lawsuit was settled out of court, but settlement details aren't known due to a non-disclosure agreement.
CSC, province reviewing inquiry recommendations
Another CSC disciplinary investigation looked into allegations of serious misconduct by some of the staff at the Edmonton Institution from 2014 to 2017.
In the final report, correctional officers who were interviewed spoke about knowing of a "fight club" that involved "allowing two rival gang members out to fight."
But the documents disclosed to the fatality inquiry were "so heavily redacted as to be of limited assistance," Groves wrote.
The judge also didn't have access to all the disclosure related to the EPS "Project Max" investigation, which she said shouldn't be separated from the specific police review of Montgrand's death.
In addition to the call for a public inquiry, Groves concludes her report with a recommendation for a CSC policy directive "mandating that all CSC employees have a duty to report any staff behaviour they are aware of, that contravenes policy directives, when such behaviour could cause harm to an inmate or other CSC staff."
The service is reviewing the fatality inquiry findings, according to a CSC spokesperson.
Policies and training initiatives have been specifically updated for safety and security at the Edmonton Institution in the 14 years since Montgrand's death, the spokesperson said in a statement.
There's also now a confidential tip line for CSC employees to report concerns about misconduct, the spokesperson said.
Heather Jenkins, the press secretary for Alberta Justice Minister Mickey Amery, said the province is considering the recommendation for a public inquiry, but no decisions have been made.
The government and CSC have until July 7 to submit an official response to Groves's recommendations.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Crown stays charges against accused Calgary double-murderer awaiting retrial
Crown stays charges against accused Calgary double-murderer awaiting retrial

Calgary Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Calgary Herald

Crown stays charges against accused Calgary double-murderer awaiting retrial

Prosecutors have stayed murder charges against a second Calgary man accused in a historic double homicide, days after conceding his appeal. Article content Leonard Brian Cochrane was arrested in 2020 and later convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in the July 11, 1994, fatal shootings of Barry Buchart and Trevor Deakins in their Radisson Heights home. Article content Article content Another Calgary man, Stuart Douglas MacGregor, was charged in the same killings but prosecutors last week stayed the two first-degree murder charges against him. Article content Article content In a statement Friday, the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service confirmed the charges against Cochrane — who was scheduled for a retrial on appeal — have also been stayed. Article content Article content 'In the matter of R v MacGregor, during the prosecution, the Crown prosecutor encountered a significant issue with the evidence. These evidentiary issues were ultimately determined to be insurmountable, and the charges were stayed on June 6, 2025,' it reads. Article content 'Crown prosecutors have also conducted a thorough examination of the available admissible evidence in the prosecution of Mr. Cochrane, exploring all possible paths forward. However, the same issues encountered in Mr. MacGregor's file impact the file of Mr. Cochrane and the matter was stayed on June 13, 2025.' Article content Article content Article content Cochrane was linked to the scene using investigative genetic genealogy, which compares individuals in known DNA databases and material found at the scene to narrow the list of suspects to relatives with similar genetic markers. Article content When MacGregor was charged, police said they used the same technology to lead them to a second suspect. Article content Defence lawyer Balfour Der said Friday that he and co-counsel James McLeod were pleased with the decision, believing their client was not guilty. Article content 'This case involves a novel and important privacy rights considerations for all Canadians. We will not get to settle that issue but I am sure it will come up in another case,' Der said in a statement. Article content MacGregor spent more than 18 months in custody before his release. Article content Calgary police issued a statement last week after charges against MacGregor were dropped. Article content 'Historical homicide investigations are inherently complex. The passage of time in these cases can present significant challenges, including changes in evidence standards, investigative techniques and legal framework,' police said.

Lockdown, search conducted at Dorchester Penitentiary
Lockdown, search conducted at Dorchester Penitentiary

CTV News

time15 hours ago

  • CTV News

Lockdown, search conducted at Dorchester Penitentiary

A federal correctional facility in New Brunswick was placed on lockdown earlier this week while officers conducted a search of the prison. Correctional Service Canada (CSC) says the medium security unit at Dorchester Penitentiary was locked down on Monday to allow staff members to conduct the search. 'The search was ordered to ensure the safety and security of the institution, its staff, and inmates. Visits have been suspended until the search is completed,' reads a Thursday news release from the agency. CSC says normal operations will resume once it is considered safe to do so. CTV News has reached out to CSC to see if the facility is still on lockdown and whether anything was seized during the search. The lockdown comes after officers seized more than half a million dollars of contraband at the penitentiary on June 2. CSC said officers found a package containing the contraband on the perimeter of the prison. Officials said the items seized included methamphetamine, marijuana, shatter, nicotine patches and tobacco, with an estimated institutional value of $534,100. They suspect the contraband was dropped by a drone. For more New Brunswick news, visit our dedicated provincial page.

Inmate at Stony Mountain Institution dies
Inmate at Stony Mountain Institution dies

CTV News

time2 days ago

  • CTV News

Inmate at Stony Mountain Institution dies

Stony Mountain Institution in Manitoba pictured here on June 11, 2021. (Source: Jamie Dowsett/ CTV News Winnipeg) An inmate serving his sentence at a Manitoba prison has died. Gordon Kornelson, 80, an inmate from Stony Mountain Institution, died of 'apparent natural causes' on June 7 according to the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC). His death was announced on Wednesday. CSC said Kornelson had been serving a sentence of four years for sexual assault since May 5, 2025. His next-of-kin have been notified. The CSC said it will review the circumstances of his death, as it does in all cases involving the death of an inmate.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store