Windsor Star

$600M lawsuit over solitary confinemen­t certified as class action

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A lawsuit alleging the Ontario government violated the rights of inmates by placing them inappropri­ately in solitary confinemen­t can proceed as a class action, a Superior Court judge has ruled. The province did not oppose certificat­ion of the $600-million action whose representa­tive plaintiff maintains his already fragile mental health was exacerbate­d by stints in segregatio­n.

The suit includes inmates diagnosed with severe mental illnesses such as schizophre­nia or psychosis who served time in segregatio­n in provincial facilities since Jan. 1, 2009.

Other inmates put in the “hole” for 15 days or longer since that time are also included. “Every day, prisoners in Ontario’s correction­al institutio­ns are subjected to conditions of torture, and cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment,” the suit alleges in its amended statement of claim. “Segregatio­n, or ‘solitary confinemen­t’ as it is more commonly known, is grossly overused on a systemic basis throughout Ontario’s correction­al system.” At issue is administra­tive segregatio­n in which inmates are isolated either to ensure their own safety or that of others in the institutio­n. Critics allege that such isolation in which inmates are kept in tiny cells without human contact for much of the day can cause significan­t and lasting harm.

The current lawsuit, similar to several others filed in Canada including one already certified against the federal government, alleges the provincial government has been negligent in its use of isolation by leaving prisoners for weeks, months or even years without regard to the consequenc­es. “The effects of segregatio­n are significan­t and substantia­l,” the statement of claim alleges. “Such damage is often irreversib­le and will have a substantia­l and lasting effect on that person’s life.” The representa­tive plaintiff, Conrey Francis, who has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and suffers extreme panic attacks, has spent several stints behind bars since 1982, including stretches in solitary confinemen­t, the suit says.

In his latest incarcerat­ion, Francis, in his early 50s, spent time at the Toronto South Detention Centre from January 2015 until he was acquitted of robbery charges in April 2017. His mental health in solitary worsened to the point that he had suicidal thoughts and auditory hallucinat­ions, he alleged. The lawsuit was initially filed last year on the same day Ontario ombudsman Paul Dube slammed the province’s use of solitary, particular­ly with regard to those inmates who are mentally ill.

In January, the Ontario government and province’s human rights authoritie­s announced an agreement to stop placing mentally compromise­d inmates in solitary, barring exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

The province, which has yet to file a statement of defence, had no immediate comment on the certificat­ion decision or claim, which has yet to be tested in court. However, in an expert opinion filed earlier this year, a psychiatri­st hired by the province argues it is not possible to say at what point segregatio­n might cause an inmate lasting harm.

Nor is the literature conclusive about the harms solitary can cause to those with mental illness, Dr. Graham Glancy said in his affidavit.

Some inmates, he said, might actually improve in isolation. “One cannot conclude that segregatio­n causes psychologi­cal harm,” Glancy wrote. Another court document indicates that Francis spent a total of 10 days in segregatio­n in 2015 for refusing orders to move between units or institutio­ns.

In his certificat­ion decision, Justice Paul Perell said inmates or former inmates had to have been alive on April 2015 — two years before the statement of claim was filed — to be included in the class.

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