July 15, 2005
Corrections boss faces
assault charge
If youre
running a jail for the Department of Corrections, youre supposed to be
setting an example
JANE
GEORGE
When Ron McCormick, Nunavuts
director of corrections, hopped on a plane last weekend, he had a serious containment
issue to manage in the community of Kugluktuk the arrest of Helen Larocque,
director of the highly-touted Illuvut correctional healing centre.
On Sunday, July 3, at about
9:30 a.m., members of the Kugluktuk RCMP detachment responded to a complaint
concerning a woman who was badly beaten inside her home.
As a result of the incident,
police arrested Larocque, 48, and Larocques sister, 37-year-old Rita Pigalak,
and charged each of them with aggravated assault and unlawfully being in a dwelling
place. The two will appear before the Nunavut Court of Justice on Aug. 15.
Police say booze contributed
to the incident.
The victim, who is a sister-in-law
of Larocque and Pigalak, was treated in the Kugluktuk Health Centre and later
medevaced to Stanton Hospital in Yellowknife.
On the previous Saturday
night, July 2, the victim had been at a house party held by Tommy Pigalak, father
of the two accused, where its alleged that someone broke a window.
The early morning attack
on her was apparently committed by someone trying to exact retribution for the
broken window at the elder Pigalaks home.
One of McCormicks
first moves in Kugluktuk was to announce that Larocque is suspended with pay
from her position at the healing centre for at least 30 days.
The situation is
in the hands of the court, McCormick said in an interview from Kugluktuk.
When thats
concluded, well see what happened. The main thing is that we take this
very seriously. The centre is continuing to operate. Staff are shaken by it,
but theyre moving on.
McCormick had praise for
the Illuvut Centres staff and for the acting director of the centre, Pauline
Plamondon. He called Larocques arrest an unfortunate situation.
It wasnt something
we expected. We try our hardest to find people who are suitable, and Im
not saying she wasnt suitable, he said.
McCormick said Larocque
went through the GNs official hiring process, which included a reference
check.
When were hiring
someone, we look for the qualities to run a centre.
The Illuvut Centre in Kugluktuk
officially opened less than six months ago, on April 2, with a showy ceremony
featuring drum dancing, a feast, and a visit by Justice Minister Paul Okalik,
whose department is responsible for correctional facilities.
Community elders
will play a significant role in teaching and reconnecting the centres
inmates with Inuit traditions and societal values, Okalik said at its
opening.
The Illuvut Centre, a former
transportation department barracks, is designed to house up to 16 low-risk adult
offenders for short-term stays.
Some Kugluktuk residents
wanted to see a new facility for young offenders instead, because the communitys
youth who now end up in custody are sent to Iqaluit.
The Illuvut Centre did,
however, create 12 new jobs for Kugluktuk.
One resident questioned
the GNs choice of Larocque as head of the centre.
You get people from
down south making the appointments and they dont have a clue who the people
are. It doesnt last, said the resident, who, like many in the community,
spoke to Nunatsiaq News only under the promise of confidentiality.
If youre running
a jail for the Department of Corrections, youre supposed to be setting
an example at that level. People in those positions should set an example: if
they arent going to, they should pay the price for their mistakes.
The Illuvut Centre isnt
popular with everyone in Kugluktuk, either. Its critics say they dont
like seeing clients walking around the community, even when accompanied by escorts.
Some clients have taken
advantage of the relative freedom offered by the centre: one offender out on
a pass managed to find a local girlfriend and a supply of booze.
After police apprehended
him, he was sent to Iqaluit to serve out the rest of his term at the Baffin
Correctional Centre.
Theres also resentment
in town because, unlike young offenders or adults on probation, the centres
clients are paid minimum wage for any community work they perform.
They also have access to
a boat and other equipment to hunt and fish when ordinary people
who are on social assistance cant afford to go out on the land.
Local RCMP are said to
be unhappy because they are often called in to assist staff with violent incidents
at the centre calls that add to their already heavy work load in Kugluktuk.
And when a client becomes
uncontrollably violent, the RCMP also end up with the responsibility and expense
of guarding him in a cell, because the healing centre has no secure isolation
room.
TOP
|