
‘Not uncommon': Inmate slides unknown item under cell door hours before overdose at South West Detention Centre
A Windsor jury is watching surveillance video from inside the South West Detention Centre from October 2019 in the ongoing inquest into the death of Joseph Gratton. (Courtesy: Coroners Office)
An inquest continues into the death of Joseph Gratton, 31, an inmate who consumed a fatal quantity of fentanyl at South West Detention Centre on Oct. 29, 2019.
Warning: contains graphic content.
The jury has seen surveillance video from inside SWDC from that evening.
Around 7:17 p.m., two corrections officers enter a cell and ask an unidentified inmate to step out into the common area so they can speak with his cellmate.
The inmate walks directly to cell #4 – Gratton's cell – and appears to speak to him and his cellmate, Blake Carter.
They slide something out of their cell to the common area.
After a brief conversation, the unidentified inmate takes that item and walks back towards his cell.
He picks up what appears to be cleaning solution left on the table, appears to speak to a jail officer and goes back to Gratton's cell.
He places something on the ground, talks to Gratton and Carter, and walks away.
You can see in the video; the item being pulled into Gratton's cell.
The jury has no evidence about what the item was.
'It's not uncommon,' Staff Sgt Randy Mascarin testified Tuesday.
He told the jury inmates trade things like peanut butter packets or salt and pepper under their cell doors on a 'quite frequent basis.'
Mascarin said the inmate – who he was directed to not identify – had been out of his cell for most the day and would have had plenty of other opportunities to smuggle contraband to Gratton or Carter during the day.
'I wouldn't have had an issue with this,' Mascarin said while telling the jury he did not go and inspect what the items were.
In 2019, Mascarin said the unidentified inmate did not have a history of smuggling illegal drugs into the jail but that has since changed.
Mascarin agreed with the lawyer for the Ministry of the Solicitor General that a 'simple thing' like peanut butter can mean a great deal to people who have so little choices in what they eat, how they live, who they talk to, when they shower or go outside.
Inquest into inmate's death
First day of an inquest into the death of inmate Joseph Gratton at South West Detention Centre. CTV Windsor's Chris Campbell has details.
Overdose timeline
The jury is starting to get a very clear timeline of the events that lead to Gratton's fatal overdose.
After the 7:17 visit to his cell by an inmate, Mascarin and the other officer working with him on 'inmate adjudication' visited Gratton's cell to check on both.
There is no evidence about what they discussed.
The next surveillance video is from 8:15 p.m., during a 'pill pass' by the jails nurse.
Jessica Chu told the jury she doesn't specifically remember her interaction with Gratton's cellmate Blake Carter.
Mascarin however testified Carter complained of vomiting in his cell toilet and asking for anti-nausea medication.
Carter, according to Mascarin, complained of eating bad food before throwing up again in the cell toilet.
Mascarin told the jury an inmate must have 'proof' they are sick to get anti-nausea medication which Chu dispensed.
'I had no reason to believe it was anything other than being ill,' Mascarin told the jury.
Neither Mascarin nor Chu spoke with Gratton during the final medical check of the night and he appeared to be fine.
Corrections officers conduct cell checks every half hour in the unit where Gratton was held.
The jury has seen surveillance video of no issues on a check by Mascarin around 9:02 p.m.
He told the jury his colleague Christine Rogers had previous conflicts with Gratton so he agreed to do checks until lights out, to ensure Rogers and Gratton did not have interact.
The next surveillance video for the jury is 11:04 p.m., on a check by Rogers.
On her first lap of the ward, she kicks on the bottom of cell door #4 before carrying on.
She returns to the unit a minute later and goes directly to cell #4 and kicks the door again.
The silent video then appears to show Rogers speak into her radio.
Another officer attends and he too kicks the door.
It appears both try to get reaction from the inmates inside and when they don't, it appears they try to open the door but the keys don't work.
By 11:06 p.m. the main lights in the common area go on – and the lights in the cells go out – as two other officers, followed by Mascarin race into the unit and open cell #4.
The video ends when the officers get into the cell.
'Extremely strange' sight
Mascarin told the jury they found Gratton on his back laying with his feet closer to the toilet.
He had vomit on his mouth, and he was unresponsive.
Carter, however, Mascarin said was in an 'extremely strange' position.
'I was caught off guard,' he testified. 'It was unlike anything I've seen.'
Carter, according to Mascarin, was flat on the floor with his arm 'draped' over Gratton's body and blood on his mouth.
He felt it looked 'staged', not like two people who unexpectedly pass out from a drug overdose.
Mascarin and two other officers tried performed CPR on Gratton while they waited for paramedics.
Gratton and Carter were rushed to hospital, but Gratton was declared dead in the emergency room.
Mascarin said Carter turned to him in the hospital and said 'Randy, looked how (expletive) up my face looks!' before admitting he might still have contraband hidden inside his body.
Carter, the jury has learned, survived the 2019 overdose.
When he returned to SWDC, Mascarin says Carter admitted he and Gratton had 'consumed drugs all day'.
'I'm getting tired of this life,' Carter allegedly said to Mascarin.
The jury has learned Carter has since died.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Georgetown resident hit with nine charges in Erin safety blitz
A truck pulling a loaded flatbed trailer was stopped in Erin as part of a safety blitz on June 16, 2025. (Courtesy: Ontario Provincial Police) A driver from Georgetown is facing nine charges as part of an Ontario Provincial Police safety blitz in the Town of Erin. Officers were conducting a proactive traffic enforcement safety blitz on Monday. As part of the initiative, they stopped a driver on Wellington Road 124 around 9:30 a.m. A 20-year-old from Georgetown was charged with defective braking system, operating a vehicle without insurance, failure to display two plates on a motor vehicle, driving a motor vehicle without a currently validated permit, unsecured load, operating an unsafe combination of vehicles, failure to display an inspection sticker or proof, driving an overweight vehicle and using a plate not in accordance with regulations.

CBC
2 hours ago
- CBC
City launches cleaning blitz to refresh Toronto's public spaces, streets and parks for the summer
Social Sharing Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow launched a new citywide initiative Saturday aimed at keeping public spaces clean, safe and well-maintained as people head outdoors to enjoy the summer weather. Under the initiative, which began Saturday, crews of 300 to 400 people will clean and refresh public spaces around the city. That work will include removing graffiti, weeds and litter from streets, sidewalks and parks, the City of Toronto said in a news release. "Too often we have garbage that might be overflowing. The streets are sometimes … not in [the] best shape and there's litter around," Chow said at an announcement Saturday. "That's why we need to create a cleaner, safer city for everyone." These cleaning blitzes will happen for several Saturdays over the next three months, the news release said. The cleaning crews will also install more than 600 new garbage and recycling bins to high-usage parks. Chow said these bins will have QR codes which people can scan to notify the city when a bin needs to be emptied. Crews will also conduct heightened enforcement and clean-up of "illegal dumping hotspots," the city's news release said. WATCH | Business owners call for end to illegal dumping at Scarborough plaza: Stop dumping trash in this Scarborough plaza, business owners say 5 months ago Duration 2:35 Business owners in a Scarborough plaza say they're frustrated with recurring piles of illegally dumped trash. CBC's Britnei Bilhete explains why cracking down on the issue is complicated. Chow said the crews will investigate who is responsible for illegal dumpings. "We will get you, so don't dump your garbage in a place where you shouldn't be," she said. They will also maintain trees, make repairs to potholes, bike lanes and bike rings, and repaint pavement markings, including crosswalks. The city said it will use data to identify neighbourhoods where cleaning blitzes are most needed. "Crews will resolve 311 service requests as well as applying an equity lens to prioritize cleaning and repairs in historically underserved, low-income and vulnerable communities where the city typically receives fewer 311 service requests," the news release said. The city said it is also hiring up to 30 students to join summer park cleaning teams and adding more custodial staff to maintain 21 outdoor pools.


CTV News
2 hours ago
- CTV News
50 charges laid in widespread commercial vehicle enforcement campaign
Numerous charges were laid after a commercial motor vehicle (CMV) enforcement campaign this past week. Numerous violations were issued after several police services led a campaign to enforce commercial motor vehicle (CMV) safety this week in the northwestern outskirts of the Greater Toronto Area. According to a social media post by provincial police, Caledon OPP, York Regional Police, Peel Regional Police, Halton Regional Police, the Town of Caledon, and the Ministry of Transportation teamed up for the campaign this past Thursday. As a result, OPP reported 67 inspections conducted, 50 charges laid, 16 CMV's taken out of service and one driver taken out of service. Police say the Ministry of Finance also supported the campaign by conducting more than 40 inspections relating to the Fuel Tax Act and the Dangerous Goods Transportation Act. According to the province, operators can face fines of up to $20,000 for failing to meet CMV safety standards and requirements.