SUB-HEADING: "Community
Safety Minister Marie-France Lalonde says the province "will be moving
forward on mandatory accreditation" for Ontario forensic labs, in the
wake of the Motherisk scandal."
It also exposed oversight
gaps at Sick Kids and in the justice system, which failed to ensure that
Motherisk’s hair tests met the high bar for evidence presented in
court, and has served as yet another reminder of the dangers of flawed forensics. In
December 2015, a retired judge appointed by the province to review the
previous decade’s worth of Motherisk hair tests concluded the lab’s
operations “fell woefully short of internationally recognized forensic
standards,” and the tests were “inadequate” and “unreliable” for use in
criminal and child protection cases. Motherisk
was never accredited as a forensic lab. It did not have clinical
accreditation, which is not as stringent as forensic accreditation but
ensures basic standards are being met, until 2011. In her report,
Justice Susan Lang found the lab did not double-check results before
August 2010, until which point it reported screening-test results
despite “an explicit warning” that the results were preliminary and must
be confirmed. Neither the hospital nor
Motherisk leadership appreciated that the nature of the tests the lab
carried out was forensic, which Lang defined as being “used for a legal
purpose.” Staff routinely performed a forensic service yet lacked the
forensic training required to meet the stringent standards for evidence
presented in court, she said. Lang also
found Sick Kids failed to provide “meaningful oversight” and did not
learn from the lessons of the 2008 public inquiry into Charles Smith, a
former Sick Kids pediatric forensic pathologist, whose flawed autopsy
analyses tainted more than a dozen cases. Lalonde
said these incidents have prompted the province to explore the
possibility of creating a process of mandatory accreditation for labs
performing forensic services “in a very serious way.”........As
Lang said in her report, forensic accreditation is not currently
required for a lab to perform tests for forensic purposes. The Standards
Council of Canada, a federal Crown corporation, is responsible for
accrediting forensic labs based on international standards, which
include strict rules for documentation and chain-of-custody procedures. Toronto
criminal defence lawyer James Lockyer, who was instrumental in exposing
the failings at Motherisk, said the review is long overdue. “If
a proper accreditation process had been in place 10 years ago for
Motherisk, presumably we wouldn’t have had these problems. They would
have been compelled to function properly in a scientific manner,” he
said. From 2005 to 2015, Motherisk
performed its hair-strand tests for 16,000 individuals at the request of
Ontario’s child protection agencies — 54 per cent of whom tested
positive for drugs or alcohol, Lang found. The tests were also relied
upon in thousands of child protection cases in B.C., Nova Scotia and New
Brunswick. Between January 2007 and March
2015, the lab’s revenues exceeded $11 million, $6.8 million of which
came from children’s aid organizations, as the Star has previously
reported. Used primarily as evidence of parental substance abuse, the
results of Motherisk’s hair tests were rarely challenged in legal
proceedings, and influenced decisions to remove children from their
families. On Lang’s recommendation, the province established the Motherisk Commission
in January to probe child protection cases in Ontario that relied, in
part, on Motherisk’s hair testing evidence, and offer counselling and
legal assistance to affected families. Led by retired judge Judith
Beaman, the commission has identified 41 cases in which there was a
“substantial reliance” on Motherisk testing out of 701 files reviewed so
far. Motherisk founder and longtime
director Gideon Koren, who retired from Sick Kids in the summer of 2015
and is now working in Israel, is under investigation by the College of
Physicians and Surgeons. Sick Kids, Koren
and former Motherisk lab manager Joey Gareri are named in several
lawsuits, including a proposed class action seeking $200 million in
damages for negligence and $250 million in punitive damages."
The entire story can be found at:
PUBLISHER'S NOTE: I am monitoring this case/issue. Keep your eye on the Charles Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at: http://www.thestar.com/topic/c