Dentist in N.L. let correctional officer pull ‘one or more’ teeth from sedated inmate
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — A dentist with practices across Atlantic Canada has been sanctioned in Newfoundland and Labrador for allowing a correctional officer to extract “one or more” teeth from a sedated inmate while another officer filmed the procedure with his phone.
A Dec. 9 decision from a Newfoundland and Labrador Dental Board tribunal says the incident took place on Oct. 16, 2020, at the Gander, N.L., office of Dr. Louis Bourget.
The document says Bourget instructed the correctional officer on how to use forceps to remove several teeth from the mouth of Blair Harris, who was an inmate in the provincial correctional system at the time.
“In fact, based on what Dr. Bourget reports a video of the event as showing, it is more than one tooth,” the decision says. “In the video he showed the correctional officer how to hold the forceps to pick up four teeth.” The decision describes in some detail how the correctional officer removed the teeth, in one case using “a twist of his wrist” and in another pulling so hard the tooth flew out and hit the wall in the clinic.