Report suggests Alberta policies a factor in death of mental-health worker
EDMONTON — A report suggests failings in Alberta government policy were a factor in the death of a mental-health worker who was killed by a client with a long history of unpredictable, violent behaviour.
Valerie Wolski, 41, was alone with Terrence Saddleback in February 2011 when she was strangled in a Camrose, Alta., care home.
Saddleback — who weighed 300 pounds and stood six feet, five inches tall — towered over Wolski, who worked for the Canadian Mental Health Association.
The fatality inquiry report says health agencies were arguing in the months before Wolski was killed over whether Saddleback should be cared for in a secure mental-health facility called the Michener Centre.


