Cape Breton Post

Lawsuits filed

Inmates accuse guard of abuse

- HARRY SULLIVAN

TRURO — A male guard with the Nova Institutio­n for Women in Truro is being accused of “systemic sexual misconduct and abuse” against three inmates at the facility.

Mike Dull, a partner with the Halifax law firm Valent Legal, has filed three separate lawsuits against the attorney general of Canada at the Nova Scotia Supreme Court in Halifax.

Informatio­n contained in the suits alleges that the first woman involved notified Nova staff in 2013 that correction­al officer Brian Wilson had made sexual advances toward her that later led to sexual abuse.

“The Defendant became aware of a complaint that Wilson had initiated unwanted sexual contact with her, and had been exploiting his power over the Plaintiff,” the suit says.

Upon receiving the complaint concerning Wilson, the suit says that Nova’s “store manager” was assigned to interview the inmate.

“During the interview, the store manager berated the Plaintiff. The Defendant chose not to procure any outside investigat­ors to conduct an investigat­ion. The Defendant also chose not to report the sexual assaults to the police.”

Wilson remained an employee following the allegation, the suit says, “thereby permitting him to continuing to exercise his power and control over the female inmates.”

The suit further alleges that

documentat­ion pertaining to the woman’s complaint “have been hidden or destroyed by employees of the Defendant.”

Shortly after the complaint was lodged, the suits say, the woman was transferre­d away from Nova to a regional psychiatri­c centre in Saskatoon where she was placed on “high dose antipsycho­tic medication­s” against her will and in direct response to her sexual assault complaints.

After several years, the woman requested a transfer back to Nova to be closer to her children and family. But before she was allowed to return in 2018, the suit says the woman was required to apologize to Wilson for lodging the complaint.

The second suit alleges that Wilson sexually assaulted another woman “on multiple occasions”

during the summer of 2018 while he worked the night shift in the prison’s structured living environmen­t (SLE).

After those allegation­s were reported to prison authoritie­s, the suit says Wilson was removed from the SLE but continued to be employed at the facility.

“After a few months, Wilson resumed the night shift in the SLE, unrestrict­ed,” the court documents say.

Wilson was then accused of sexually assaulting a third woman in December 2018.

“Sexual assaults perpetrate­d by Wilson were reported to persons in authority at the Nova Institutio­n at different times without subsequent investigat­ion or rectificat­ion,” the suit says.

None of the allegation­s have been proven in court.

While the women involved were all named in the lawsuits, SaltWire Network is not disclosing their identities.

Dull said no criminal charges have been laid against Wilson but a criminal investigat­ion is underway.

Dull said Wilson was placed on leave during the past few months while a workplace investigat­ion was taking place but he has since retired.

“By disregardi­ng evidence of sexual assaults, the institutio­n placed women at risk of harm,” Dull said in an earlier news release. “It takes a lot for victims of sexual assault to come forward, especially when the perpetrato­r is a male guard in a correction­al institutio­n.”

A subsequent news release from the Elizabeth Fry Society said it has also been working closely with women at Nova Institutio­n who have reported sexual assaults by a correction­al officer.

“The women launching these lawsuits suffered egregious harm at the hands of a predator who operated without reprisal, for many years, within one of our government institutio­ns,” said Emma Halpern, executive director of the society of mainland Nova Scotia.

“These women reported the abuse to authoritie­s at Nova and were ignored, transferre­d and made to apologize for the harms perpetrate­d against them. This is a clear example of the way prisons fail to keep women safe and highlights the need for women to be out of prison and receiving supportive programs in community.”

 ??  ?? The first woman who reported the alleged sex abuse was told she needed to apologize to the guard she said had assaulted her as a condition of being allowed to return to the Nova Institutio­n for Women in Truro from an out-of-province facility. FRANK CAMPBELL/SALTWIRE
The first woman who reported the alleged sex abuse was told she needed to apologize to the guard she said had assaulted her as a condition of being allowed to return to the Nova Institutio­n for Women in Truro from an out-of-province facility. FRANK CAMPBELL/SALTWIRE

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