N.S. man’s letters indicate suicide risk as short-staffed jail kept inmates in cells
HALIFAX — For days on end, Richard Murray barely left his jail cell, trapped by staffing shortages that forced officials to lock down inmates.
“This is total cruelty and I only exist in these four walls of hell …. Why do I even fight to see another day?” the 60-year-old Murray wrote in a letter received by his wife Mary Hendsbee on Jan. 16.
By the time the handwritten letter arrived, Murray had given up fighting. The day before, he had taken his own life inside the Central Nova Scotia Correctional Facility.
Murray had been awaiting trial for nine months after his arrest on charges of pointing a firearm and uttering threats at his home near Antigonish, N.S. — charges he intended to vigorously contest in court.