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Parents of boy in Alberta meningitis death to challenge conviction in Supreme Court

Thu, Jul 14: Bail has been granted to an Alberta couple convicted of failing to get proper medical treatment for their son who died of meningitis – Jul 15, 2016

A father convicted in the meningitis death of his toddler says he and his wife will stay out on bail while they take their appeal to Canada’s top court.

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David Stephan and his wife, Collet, were both found guilty last year of failing to provide the necessaries of life in their son Ezekiel’s 2012 death.

Their trial in Lethbridge, Alta., heard they treated the 19-month-old boy with garlic, onion and horseradish rather than taking him to a doctor. The Stephans eventually called 911 but the little boy died in hospital.

The three-member Alberta Court of Appeal upheld the conviction last week but because the ruling wasn’t unanimous, the couple has an automatic right to have the Supreme Court hear arguments in the case.

READ MORE: Alberta Court of Appeal upholds convictions against parents in son’s meningitis death 

“I would also love to thank our lawyers for initiating conversation with the Crown prosecution to have me stay out of jail while we are filing a Supreme Court application,” Stephan said in a recent Facebook post from his home in Nelson, B.C.

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“And oddly enough I would like to thank the Crown prosecution, who in times past have been excessively cruel and inhumane towards us, but yet in this situation have fully consented to extending our bail that we have been out on for nearly the past year and a half as we went through the appeal process.”

Stephan said he believes the Crown is being co-operative either because it saw how cruel a situation his family was in or realized how bad it looked putting a family in an “inhumane situation.”

READ MORE: Timeline of Ezekiel Stephan’s final days, the Alberta boy who died of meningitis

David Stephan was sentenced to four months in jail and his wife was ordered to spend three months under house arrest — the only exceptions being trips to church and medical appointments. The Crown has indicated it plans to appeal the sentences saying they are too lenient.

Witnesses at the trial said the little boy’s body was so stiff he couldn’t sit in his car seat, so the toddler had to lie on a mattress when his mother drove him from their rural Alberta home to a naturopathic clinic in Lethbridge, where she bought an echinacea mixture.

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The Stephans never called for medical assistance until Ezekiel stopped breathing. He was rushed to a local hospital and died after being transported to Calgary’s Children’s Hospital.

Stephan used much of his recent Facebook post to criticize the media for what he called its unfair coverage of the case which he says has resulted in a number of threats against him and his family.

READ MORE: Tamara Lovett verdict: Calgary mom guilty in death of 7-year-old son 

Last week, a Calgary judge sentenced Tamara Lovett, 48, to three years in prison for the death of her seven-year-old son.

She failed to seek medical treatment for her son Ryan’s strep infection, and instead gave him dandelion tea and oil of oregano.

Justice Kristine Eidsvik ruled the boy died an excruciating, unnecessary death because of his mother’s failure to bring him to a medical doctor.

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