by: michelle lalonde
family members and friends of akeem scott say they suspect racial profiling played a role in the young black man’s death.
scott, 26, died on june 21, 2019 of acute peritonitis
, a life-threatening but treatable condition, hours after leaving the jewish general hospital’s emergency department in exhausted frustration. he had arrived by ambulance in excruciating pain, but was not seen by a doctor in the four hours that he waited in the er, at times writhing on the floor from the pain.
“it was so awful, and i don’t want it to happen to anyone else,” scott’s brother, zion green, told the montreal gazette tuesday. “it’s very hurtful. i just wonder if they neglected him because he was a young black man.”
green called an ambulance that day to bring his brother to the hospital from his mother’s home in côte-des-neiges, because the stomach pain scott had been experiencing for days had become insupportable.
once at the hospital, green contacted his brother’s best friend, malick sangaré, who immediately joined them at the er to offer support. the two say they tried for four hours to get medical attention for scott, or at least a bed for him to stretch out on.
at two points, green said, scott lay down on the floor in a fetal position, moaning in pain. sangaré claims security guards told them they had to get him up or they would be asked to leave. scott was eventually moved to another waiting area, but still not offered a bed, sangaré said.