No records of fatal overdose where John Rustad says he saw one

The B.C. Coroners Service says it has no record of any recent drug toxicity death at a Vancouver intersection where B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad said he saw a man die while on his way to a televised election debate.

Rustad told Tuesday’s party leaders’ debate that he saw someone die “from an overdose” on the corner of Robson and Hornby streets in Vancouver, later telling a news conference he watched first responders “pumping his chest” as an ambulance arrived.

The B.C. Coroners Service says it would be notified of a deadly overdose, and it has no record of such an event in the last two and a half weeks at the location given by Rustad.

The service says if first responders were on scene and a person died, “a coroner would be called,” and it would also be notified if a person received resuscitation but later died in hospital. 

A downtown urban intersection on a cloudy day shows pedestrians in a crosswalk and vehicles in the background.
The intersection of Robson and Hornby streets in downtown Vancouver is next to Robson Square, the location of the Vancouver Law Courts. (Google Maps)

B.C. Emergency Health Services also says it has “no records of any patient events” on Tuesday at the corner of Robson and Hornby streets “or on the blocks immediately adjacent to that intersection.”

CBC News has reached out to Rustad and the B.C. Conservative Party. However, neither has responded to a request for comment about what Rustad says he saw.

The Conservative leader did not have any public events scheduled for Wednesday, the day after the debate.

He had used the anecdote during his debate with NDP Leader David Eby and Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau as an illustration of what he called “the British Columbia that David Eby has created.”

“I was on my way over here, and on the corner of Robson and Hornby, there was an individual who died, and there were emergency people rushing [around]. This person died from an overdose,” he said.

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He was asked to elaborate at the post-debate news conference.

“[What] I saw from the window as I was looking down at this individual on the ground with the emergency people pumping his chest trying to bring him back to life and an ambulance coming up … I mean, it just, it’s horrendous to think that that is becoming normal place on our streets here in Vancouver and across this province.”

B.C. Coroners Service media relations manager Amber Schinkel said in an emailed response to questions that she had “reviewed drug toxicity deaths in Vancouver since September 25, 2024, and there is nothing near this address.”

Asked if there were circumstances in which the service would not record a death, she said if it involved drug toxicity, the coroner would be notified.

An ambulance rushes by with flashing red sirens.
B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad said that he saw emergency responders attempting to resuscitate someone at a downtown intersection who later died. However, authorities have said there is no record of such a death or of an ambulance attending the scene. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

“If first responders had attempted to resuscitate a person at a scene and the person died, a coroner would be called. If first responders transported the person to hospital, where they later died, the Coroners Service would still be notified,” she said.

She said an exception was if a person was in their home in the area and under a doctor’s care when they died, “a death through MAID, for example,” then the service would not be notified.

Source

Posted in CBC