Pubdate: Wed, 05 Nov 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Gerry Bellett, Staff Writer POLICE USED 'LESS-LETHAL' UNIT TO DEAL WITH ADDICT Man Died In Hospital Shortly After Being Arrested By Police An inquest began Tuesday into the death of 40-year-old drug user Daniel Hong Ross, who died Sept. 2, 2007, shortly after being arrested by Vancouver police officers. The police were called to the Murray Hotel, 1119 Hornby St., just before noon after staff heard Hong Ross screaming and trashing his suite. Hotel manager John Gaspardy said Hong Ross had been admitted to hospital a few months earlier for an overdose and had almost died. He came off drugs for a while but then slipped back, Gaspardy said. When he was off drugs, Hong Ross was compassionate and kind, but when he was using, he was paranoid and menacing and given to bouts of violence in his one-room suite in the cramped 100-year-old hotel, he said. Faced with this, Gaspardy said it was unsafe for staff to try to enter Hong Ross's room that morning, so he called police. When the officers arrived he told them Hong Ross was likely high on crack cocaine. Evidence presented at the inquest Tuesday showed how police officers reacted to what was a potentially dangerous encounter with someone in a state of "excited delirium" in tight quarters where they had no room to manoeuvre if they were attacked. Const. James Leishman and his partner, Const. Scott Madden, testified they could hear a male screaming incoherently and smashing objects inside the room and could hear the crash of metal. Leishman said he decided to ask for a "less-lethal weapons unit" to come and help to avoid the necessity of the two officers having to use their firearms if confronted by Hong Ross with a weapon. Less-lethal units are armed with Tasers or shotguns that fire bean-bag rounds that are designed to disable, not kill. Const. Michael Vegh arrived armed with a bean-bag shotgun and the officers forced the door open after repeated calls to Hong Ross failed to get a response. Leishman said he was concerned the officers would have no place to retreat if attacked. He was designated as the "lethal over-watch officer" and drew his side arm to protect Vegh if things went wrong. He said people in a state of excited delirium often possess superhuman strength and are impervious to pain. The door was jammed by a bicycle and other objects but the officers forced it open a couple of feet and Vegh could see a person lying on the floor thrashing about and moaning. A large knife was lying on the floor close to Hong Ross. The officers went in, rolled him over and handcuffed him with his hands behind his back. Madden then dragged him out into the hallway to be examined by paramedic Heidi Stoll. At this point, they found another knife that had been dragged out with him. Hong Ross was unresponsive and was kicking out with his feet, so Vegh put a hobble over them. The corridors were too narrow to permit the paramedics to bring in a stretcher, so the three officers picked Hong Ross up and carried him down the stairs. Stoll said she was behind them making sure the patient's head didn't strike the stairs or walls. He was placed on a stretcher and taken the short distance to St. Paul's Hospital. She was unable to take his vital signs as Hong Ross was struggling, but she did administer Narcan, a drug used to detoxify people who have overdosed on heroin or another narcotic. She said it had no effect. As Hong Ross was being wheeled through the hospital, he stopped breathing. Hospital staff worked for half an hour to revive him, but he was pronounced dead at 1:40 p.m. Coroner Scott Fleming told the jury an autopsy revealed the cause of death was an overdose of amphetamines. The inquest was expected to conclude today. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin