May 15th, 2025

Montreal Innu man’s ‘inhumane’ death shows need for more homeless services: coroner


By Canadian Press on May 15, 2025.

MONTREAL — The death of an unhoused Innu man whose body was found inside a portable toilet in Montreal was avoidable, a Quebec coroner said Thursday, highlighting the need for additional resources to combat homelessness.

Raphaël “Napa” André died on Jan. 17, 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

André, 51, was found steps away from the Open Door shelter in downtown Montreal, which was closed by public health officials because of plumbing problems and a COVID-19 outbreak. Quebec had also imposed a nighttime curfew to curb the spread of the virus.

“We must keep in mind our collective responsibility when a death occurs that was avoidable,” coroner Stéphanie Gamache wrote in her report.

André’s death was attributed to hypothermia in the context of severe alcohol intoxication. His blood-alcohol level was more than four times the legal limit for driving a vehicle. Nonetheless, Gamache said, he could have been saved.

“It’s impossible for me to conclude that Mr. André was the only person responsible for his fate,” Gamache wrote.

During a news conference later in the day, she said, “Yes, he was severely intoxicated, but it was hypothermia, and had he been in a secure place that evening, he would not have passed away.”

Her 75-page report includes 23 recommendations, such as better communication between actors in the health network and culturally sensitive accommodations for Indigenous Peoples. She said all of the recommendations are intertwined.

“The problem of homelessness is complex and this public inquiry cannot, unfortunately, provide all the answers,” Gamache wrote. However, we are fortunate to live in a society that is making efforts to reduce social inequalities.”

The inquiry found that André spent a lot of time in the health network, notably emergency rooms. He’d often talked about entering a program to curb his drinking. His health records numbered more than 4,000 pages, the coroner noted.

Gamache became emotional as she discussed André’s case. “It was a difficult investigation because the circumstances of the death were, in my opinion, truly inhumane,” she said, choking back tears.

Fifty-one witnesses testified in May and June 2024. Among the most telling moments was when his mother, Suzanne Chemaganish, a local Innu elder, came to testify.

“I think her disbelief in not understanding that in this big city, all the doors were closed to her son,” Gamache said.

After taking in the report, Réal McKenzie, chief of the Innu Nation of Matimekush-Lac John, told reporters that Gamache’s report was well-received and that he would explain it in Innu during an address to the community, located near the border with Labrador.

McKenzie echoed some of the disbelief that had been expressed by André’s mother. In a community that often deals with extreme cold, the idea of turning someone away makes little sense.

“I request a real change on that part,” McKenzie said. “If you show up at the door one minute before close, you get an answer like ‘no room’? Come on, forget the rules and (say) ‘come in my son, come in my friend,’ that’s a human being, that’s what we should do.”

Gamache’s report also recommends turning seasonal emergency shelters into permanent year-round services and ensuring emergency health plans better account for the needs of homeless people.

“They don’t have the same resources that other people do in terms of housing, and so I think if ever another pandemic of this sort would happen, we have to think of them before implementing some rules,” Gamache said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 15, 2025.

Sidhartha Banerjee, The Canadian Press




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