Coroner concludes death of Gilles Duceppe’s 93-year-old mother preventable
MONTREAL — A Quebec coroner has ruled the hypothermia death of Gilles Duceppe’s 93-year-old mother last January was accidental, but video footage of the woman trying to re-enter the luxury seniors’ residence from the enclosed courtyard where she died shows it was preventable as well.
Helene Rowley Hotte Duceppe, the mother of the former Bloc Quebecois leader, died of hypothermia on Jan. 20, on a morning when it was a bitter minus 35 degrees outside and snowing.
She was drawn outside by what turned out to be a false alarm and was already trapped when Montreal firefighters gave the all-clear to the tower in which she lived and advised residents to stay in their units. Earlier, a carbon monoxide alarm had gone off in a separate tower.
Coroner Gehane Kamel recounted Tuesday that the woman — who was in fine health with the exception of requiring a hearing aid — was visible on surveillance video, but staff did not notice her struggling to get inside, nor did they detect her absence from her apartment.