Pubdate: Thu, 24 Jun 2010 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2010 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact Website: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2878 Author: Adam Huras JURY CALLS FOR CRACKDOWN ON ILLEGAL DRUGS IN JAILS Panel: Inquest rules inmate died of lethal cocktail of drugs MONCTON - A coroner's inquest has ruled that a lethal cocktail of prescription and illegal drugs caused the death of an inmate on remand in a Moncton detention centre. The jury at the three-day inquest labelled the death of Derrick Phillip Urwin as accidental in its findings, but recommended that further action be taken to eliminate the flow of illegal drugs into the province's correctional facilities. "We recommend that as contraband will always be a problem, that correctional staff persevere and continue to develop new ways to detect contraband," said Mark Powers, the juror who delivered the five-person panel's findings on Wednesday. Urwin, of River Glade, located west of Moncton, was on remand at the time of his death. He was accused of playing a role in the killing of a man whose remains were found in a wooded area outside Salisbury in fall 2006. A forensic toxicologist testified this week that two prescribed medications - an anti-depressant and a painkiller - as well as cocaine, Valium, OxyContin and marijuana were found in Urwin's system after his death. The source of the illegal drugs remained undetermined, although testimony by Codiac RCMP Const. David Morrissey on Wednesday uncovered that three inmates alleged Urwin was provided illegal contraband, both illegal drugs and tobacco, by a corrections officer. Morrissey, who was the investigating officer into Urwin's death, said there was no evidence found to prove the allegations true. A corrections official denied the allegation. The five-person jury delivered six recommendations in total, taking aim at the events which led to why the 36-year-old was found unresponsive in his cell three years ago. The jury had learned that Urwin was taking prescribed medication that he refused to take less than 12 hours before his death. Shortly after refusing his medication on Sept. 5, 2007, Urwin then communicated that he wasn't feeling well and that his medicine was too strong. Later that evening, the delivery of another other round of medication was not given to Urwin because he was found asleep, snoring loudly. The jury recommended in its findings that inmates be given the opportunity to refuse medication at every scheduled delivery time. It also recommended that a process and procedure be created for reporting unusual signs and symptoms by inmates. Sheldon Currie, an institutional operations manager with correctional services and the inquest's final witness, said Wednesday that the institution's staff responded professionally and systematically to Urwin, but that in hindsight his symptoms and complaints could have been pieced together for a quicker response. "If each officer had all of the information, the end likely wouldn't have been different, but we may have been able to put him on alert earlier," Currie said. Currie said an electronic database in now in place where all information on each inmate is available to correctional officers. The jury recommended that communication be improved between all correctional staff members. It also called for Moncton Detention Centre emergency medical response procedures and the use of deliberators to be reviewed. A final recommendation asked for coroner's inquest in held at a more timely fashion in proximity to the person in question's death. While recommendations are not binding by law, they are filed with the office of the chief coroner, sent to the involved parties and included in an annual report by the chief coroner which is tabled in the legislature annually. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt Elrod