Pubdate: Thu, 06 May 2004 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Gordon Kent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) ATTACKER HAD 'OFF THE SCALE' STRENGTH Officers Faced 'Flurry Of Punches,' Fatality Inquiry Told EDMONTON - One of three police officers who used kicks, punches and a baton to subdue a cocaine addict minutes before he died says the man showed "off the scale" strength. "That's the only way to describe it ... a donnybrook is exactly what happened there," Const. Richard Abbott testified Wednesday at a fatality inquiry looking into the death of Doug Oliver. Toxicology tests later showed the 37-year-old Kelowna, B.C., man had near-lethal amounts of cocaine in his body. The medical examiner concluded he died from excited delirium, a rare condition affecting psychiatric patients and cocaine users who become so agitated that an overpowering adrenaline rush stops their heart. Abbott and his partner were called to the Grand Hotel, at 10266 103rd St., on Feb. 5, 2003, to evict Oliver from his second-floor room, where staff suspected someone was buying or selling drugs. When he opened the suite door around 8:30 a.m., Abbott saw Oliver standing with a screwdriver in his hand, twitchy and unresponsive to commands. Oliver finally put down the screwdriver as ordered, blurting out that there were warrants for his arrest. He knocked away Abbott's hand as the officer tried to put on handcuffs. Abbott grabbed one arm, his partner, Const. Ian Brooks, grabbed the other, but Oliver pulled the men down. Abbott twice hit Oliver on the head with his palm as hard as he could and nothing happened. "There was a flurry of punches, knees and kicks. I couldn't get close to him -- every time I got near to him I got hit," he said. "This fight that ensued with Mr. Oliver, it's off the scale with the strength and intensity and the violence." Whacking Oliver's arms and shoulders with a baton didn't make a difference, even a blow that skipped up and cracked his head so hard Abbott thought he'd be knocked unconscious. After 10 minutes of grappling, Abbott was exhausted. Oliver grabbed his baton and tried to pull it away. "I decided that if he got my baton I was going to have to shoot him, because I had no strength left." Const. Kyle Deeg, who arrived to help his two colleagues partway through the fight, described the scene as "mayhem." With 14 years of judo training, he kicked Oliver four times as hard as he could and the other man didn't even flinch, he testified. "I have never seen that type of strength before." The officers eventually got Oliver face down on the floor, hands cuffed behind his back. Deeg and Brooks went to wash off the blood which had been spattered on them, Abbott said. Within minutes Oliver's breathing became laboured. They called for an ambulance, but there was nothing emergency medical services could do. "I heard him take a last breath ... and EMS showed up almost simultaneously," Abbott said. Oliver's mother, Laverne, who attended the hearing with his sister Tina, questioned why police needed to use this level of violence. "It just seems to me the more Doug was provoked, the harder he would fight," she told Deeg. "I'm just really, really wondering why so many excessive, blunt hits had to be done. Why did he take 48 blows to his body and some to his head?" Shawn Beaver, lawyer for the three officers, said there's evidence Oliver had attacked his former girlfriend with a knife while stoned on cocaine and thought the devil was after him. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom