Pubdate: Thu, 13 Jan 2005
Source: Era-Banner, The (CN ON)
Copyright: 2005 The Era-Banner
Contact:  http://www.yorkregion.com/yr/newscentre/erabanner/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2678
Author: Martin Derbyshire, Staff Writer

POLICE REFUSE TO RETRACT IMPAIRED CLAIM

Admission Of Error Not Enough For Family

The toxicology report never said Janette Montgomery was impaired the day 
she died.

York Regional Police issued a news release last week clarifying a 
toxicology report from the Centre for Forensic Sciences did not state the 
Stouffville teenager was impaired when she lost control of her car and 
crashed last August.

But the force's refusal to retract the claim she was impaired at all still 
has the grieving family upset.

"They've admitted they made an error. The toxicology report never said she 
was impaired and they've admitted that," Janette's mother Karen Montgomery 
said. "But what I wanted was to clear her name and they haven't done that."

Chief Armand La Barge said he called Mrs. Montgomery to apologize for the 
grief the error caused, but did not want to argue the impairment issue.

"We just wanted to officially clarify that the report from the Centre for 
Forensic Sciences did not indicate she was impaired," he said. "(The 
question of whether she was impaired) is something we do not want to get 
into. All I can say is it is possible someone may have come to a different 
conclusion with the same set of facts. We are hopeful the clarification 
will assist the family with getting on with the grieving process.

What happened here is a young girl lost her life in a tragic situation and 
both Staff-Sgt. Tom Carrique and I have personally apologized to Mrs. 
Montgomery for our error and expressed our sympathy to the family."

Janette was giving a friend a ride home shortly after 9 a.m. Aug. 29 when 
she changed lanes to pass another car on Green Lane in East Gwillimbury.

It was raining heavily and she lost control, crossed in front of the other 
car and hit its front bumper. Her Cadillac Eldorado, a gift from her 
grandfather just weeks earlier, left the road and hit a pole.

The Cardinal Carter Catholic High School student was taken to hospital, 
where she died.

Three months later, York Regional Police issued a news release stating a 
toxicology report from the Centre of Forensic Science indicated Janette had 
drugs and alcohol in her system and was impaired.

But toxicology reports do not indicate impairment, only a level of drugs or 
alcohol present in a test sample of a subject's blood, urine or saliva.

As such, a copy of the toxicology report obtained by the York Region 
Newspaper Group did not indicate she was impaired, only that she had levels 
of THC (the active ingredient in marijuana), trace amounts of ethanol and 
benzoylecgonine, a metabolite of cocaine, in her blood.

Claiming police jumped to conclusions without scientific proof, Mrs. 
Montgomery demanded officers retract the assertion her daughter was impaired.

But while police admitted the original news release was wrong based on the 
toxicology report, traffic unit Staff-Sgt. Carrique said the force stood by 
the determination of a drug recognition expert, a breath alcohol technician 
and a collision investigator that said Janette was impaired.

The latest news release does not retract that claim.

"They haven't really solved the problem, they've just tried to put a 
Band-Aid on it. I appreciate that the chief called personally to apologize, 
but they really haven't retracted anything. They have just apologized for 
all the grief they've caused," Mrs. Montgomery said.

With no desire to dredge up the painful memory of the loss of her daughter, 
Mrs. Montgomery is not positive she will pursue her request police retract 
the claim.

"It's tough. It's very upsetting. Nobody should be put through this. But we 
got them to admit they made an error and that's probably the most we're 
going to get. I'm not sure what to do. We may not want to keep dredging 
this up because what are we really going to accomplish? All I really wanted 
was to clear my daughter's name. She was not a bad person. They just made 
it look like she was."
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