As George Floyd's death shines spotlight on knee-on-neck restraint, family of Ontario man speaks out
Their deaths share a painful resemblance, but there's no video of Soleiman Faqiri's final moments
As the images of George Floyd gasping for air with a police officer kneeling on his neck play over and over again on television screens around the world, the family of Soleiman Faqiri has watched with a gnawing sadness.
It's been three-and-a-half years since the 30-year-old Ontario man, who suffered from schizophrenia, was found lifeless on the floor of a segregation cell at the Central East Correctional Centre in Lindsay, Ont. — after what police have described as an altercation with guards.
A coroner's report initially deemed Faqiri's cause of death "unascertained."
But the case was reopened after an investigation by CBC's The Fifth Estate, in which an inmate across the hall from Faqiri said he watched in horror as guards repeatedly pepper-sprayed and beat him, one of them allegedly pressing his knee into Faqiri's neck.
"George's death struck a particular chord for my family," Faqiri's brother, Yusuf, told CBC News. "When there's no accountability, it seems like these things continue to happen."
Unlike the Floyd case, there is no video of what transpired in Faqiri's cell on the day he died — a fact that has haunted his family.
Faqiri was arrested in Ajax, Ont., on Dec. 4, 2016 after allegedly stabbing his neighbour with an "edged weapon."
The once straight-A student, who was captain of his high school rugby team and attended the University of Waterloo, struggled with schizophrenia and had been apprehended some 10 times under province's Mental Health Act.
This time, though, instead of a hospital, he was taken to a jail cell. Eleven days later, he was dead.
Practice has come under fire before
Exactly what killed Faqiri will be for the coroner to determine; whether a guard kneeled into his neck, for police to investigate.
Police notes from the day of Faqiri's death reference a "blow or pressure" on his neck. And while the coroner's investigation did not zero in on an exact cause of death, it did say the possibility of asphyxiation could not be ruled out.