Pubdate: Wed, 08 Feb 2006 Source: Amherst Daily News (CN NS) Copyright: Amherst Daily News 2006 Contact: http://www.amherstdaily.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3379 Author: Darrell Cole Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) A LITTLE BIT OF CLOSURE AMHERST -- It has been just over eight months since Joan Cadman's life was shattered when her 19-year-old son Brent died suddenly. Aside from having to deal with the loss of her son, who she calls her little angel, Cadman and her family have had to live through rumours that both alcohol and drugs were involved in Brent's death and feel as though a tremendous weight has been lifted off their shoulders now that the autopsy report shows neither were a factor. "It has given me closure," she said while studying the medical examiner's report into Cadman's death on June 4, 2005. "Brent was my life, I lived for him and knowing that drugs and alcohol were not involved just means so much to me and my family." In the days following Cadman's death, rumours began circulating around the school and the community that the popular Grade 12 student had taken ecstasy and alcohol on the night of his death. It's something that haunted the family in the time between his death and their receiving his autopsy report -- something they were constantly reminded of when they were out in the community. "People would come up to me and say it's a shame Brent had to go that way," she said. "I would look at Brent's picture and say "why, why, why did you do it? I was blaming myself because I wondered if there was something I did wrong. When I first looked at the autopsy report I looked up and there was a picture of Brent giving me the thumbs up as if to say 'I'm alright mom.'" Cadman, who lived through every parent's nightmare when she found her son's body, said she had to know how Brent died and received a copy of the autopsy report on Jan. 19. Upon receiving it immediately went to her son's grave to apologize for thinking that maybe the rumours were right. "He doesn't deserve these rumours," she said, pointing out that no one can know what it's like to lose a son or daughter until they have experienced it for themselves. According to the autopsy report, Cadman had no drugs in his blood or urine and just minimal amounts of alcohol, lower than the legal limit for operating a motor vehicle. The cause of death was ruled accidental by positional asphyxiation with a piece of vegetable matter found in his lung tissue, meaning he had aspirated it. When the autopsy report first arrived, Cadman said she didn't want to read it because she was scared of what it would say and was afraid it would prove the rumours true. "I didn't want to read it. I was scared. My dad opened it and read it and my mother called me to tell me that I would like what it said," she said, adding that even though the autopsy showed drugs weren't involved she feels as though she knows what it is like to lose a child to drugs. "It's the best piece of news I have had since Brent's death. There haven't been a lot of opportunities to smile since then, but this gives me a little bit of closure." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake