Pubdate: Sat, 09 Feb 2008 Source: Daily News, The (CN NS) Copyright: 2008 The Daily News Contact: http://www.hfxnews.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/179 Author: Richard Cuthbertson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) DRUG SUPPLIER GETS TWO YEARS FOR DEATH When police left their home that day three years ago, they felt like officers had taken a piece of their heart. Anita and Leo Currie had just been told their son was dead. Leo Shaun Currie was found deceased in bed at his Sheet Harbour home on March 6, 2005. A friend discovered the body. The 35-year-old died due to respiratory failure caused by a combination of alcohol and methadone he'd drunk the evening before. The sentiments of his parents, contained in a victim impact statement, were read in Dartmouth provincial court yesterday by Crown attorney Ron MacDonald. It was Edward Melvin Fleet who gave Currie the methadone the evening before he died. Yesterday, the 23-year-old was sentenced for criminal negligence causing death and possession for the purpose of trafficking. Although he never meant for the man to die, MacDonald said, Fleet was well aware of the effects of methadone. And although Currie was drinking beer when Fleet handed him the drug, Fleet knew methadone should not be taken with alcohol. MacDonald noted that soon after the death, Fleet gave a statement to police expressing remorse. Yesterday, Fleet was sentenced to two years in prison, a joint recommendation between Crown and defence. Judge Patrick Curran said he had some misgivings about the recommendation, but accepted it. No sentence will make up for the loss of life, Curran said, and Currie's family feels pain the rest of us really can't grasp. Still struggling with the death of his son, Leo Currie said outside the courtroom he doesn't understand why Fleet was given methadone by a clinic to take without supervision. As for Fleet's sentence, Leo Currie said: "I hope he takes this opportunity to straighten his life around. He's a young man and it's pitiful to see someone so young" in trouble with the law. Curran said he simply hoped Fleet would think about the life he helped take. The man owes it to Currie's family to live differently than he has up to now, the judge said. A pre-sentence report reveals Fleet had a "horrendously dysfunctional upbringing," MacDonald said. There are drug-addiction issues, but Fleet has not taken advantage of the treatment programs he's been offered. Defence lawyer Kelly Serbu said his client suffered a brain injury during a car accident when he was 14 years old. Soon after, Fleet began abusing drugs. Fleet had obtained a weekend dose of methadone lawfully from a clinic. He arrived at Currie's home in the early evening. Fleet gave the methadone to Currie and then left. The court was told Fleet did this to gain favour with Currie, and there was something of an agreement that Currie would buy more in the future. That evening, witnesses noticed Currie drinking from the bottle of methadone and drinking alcohol. He became extremely intoxicated and his friends put him to bed in the recovery position. The next day a close friend went to check on Currie. He was dead. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin