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Supreme Court Justice Clement Gascon says he had panic attack before brief disappearance

ABOVE: Supreme Court Justice Clement Gascon apologizes for brief disappearance, says he had panic attack – May 14, 2019

Supreme Court Justice Clement Gascon says he suffered a panic attack last week before he briefly went missing Wednesday night.

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Gascon, who has already announced plans to retire in September, said in a statement Tuesday that he has long dealt with depression and anxiety, an “insidious illness” he has generally been able to manage, but led him to a crisis last week.

“On the afternoon of Wednesday, May 8, affected both by the recent announcement of a difficult and heart-rending career decision and by a change in medication, I conducted myself in an unprecedented and unaccustomed manner by going out without warning and remaining out of touch for several hours,” Gascon said. “I can neither explain nor justify what I understand to have been a panic attack, and I wish to apologize most profusely to all those who suffered as a result.”

Ottawa police sent a missing-person alert last Wednesday evening, saying the judge had been seen in early afternoon heading away from the courthouse near Parliament and his family was concerned for his safety. A short time later, the police said Gascon had been found safe and sound.

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Until Tuesday, neither the police nor the Supreme Court would explain the incident, though the court’s executive legal officer — a top aide to Chief Justice Richard Wagner — said it wouldn’t affect his ability to continue on the bench.

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“This health issue has been taken care of and treated with the necessary medical support,” Gascon said in his statement. “I confirm that I am in good health, and am fully capable of performing my duties as a judge.”

He can’t “erase what happened,” he said, but intends to put it behind him.

Gascon, 58, is a specialist in business law and has been on the Supreme Court for five years, having been appointed by former prime minister Stephen Harper after 12 years as a judge in Quebec.

He announced his impending retirement in mid-April, citing personal and family reasons for quitting the top court at an age younger than many justices are when they join it.

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Last year, the family of late justice Gerald Le Dain went public with the story of his departure from the Supreme Court in 1988, saying then-chief justice Brian Dickson forced Le Dain out after he was hospitalized with depression.

A former top aide to Dickson had previously written that the decision was made because the Supreme Court had a heavy load at the time and could not handle being short a judge; Le Dain’s family told the CBC he would have returned after a short time off to recuperate and called the court’s actions “unconscionable.”

Just after Gascon’s statement was released Tuesday, Independent MP and former justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould thanked Gascon for sharing his struggle with depression and anxiety.

“Pleased to hear you are in good health and continuing to perform your duties as a judge,:” she wrote on Twitter.

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