Lethbridge Herald

Solitary confinemen­t rules struck down

- Geordon Omand THE CANADIAN PRESS — VANCOUVER

A British Columbia Supreme Court judge has struck down a law that permits federal prisons to put inmates into solitary confinemen­t indefinite­ly.

Justice Peter Leask says the practice of isolating prisoners for undefined lengths of time is unconstitu­tional, but he suspended his decision for 12 months to give the government time to deal with its ramificati­ons.

The British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n and the John Howard Society filed the legal challenge in 2015, calling solitary confinemen­t a cruel and inhumane punishment that can lead to severe psychologi­cal trauma and suicide.

The Crown argued the practice is a reasonable and necessary tool when prisoners pose a threat to others or are at risk of being harmed by the general prison population.

The federal government introduced a bill in June that would set an initial time limit for segregatio­n of 21 days, with a reduction to 15 days once the legislatio­n is law for 18 months.

The government tried to stop the trial, saying the legislatio­n introduced last year would impose a time limit on solitary confinemen­t terms, but the judge allowed the case to proceed.

Leask concluded in his judgment released Wednesday that prolonged confinemen­t places the federal inmates in significan­t risk of serious psychologi­cal harm, including mental pain and suffering, and puts them at increased risk of selfharm and suicide.

The written decision says the risk of harm is intensifie­d in the case of inmates with mentally illness.

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