Bay of Plenty Times

Heat on Correction­s over prison ploys

‘NZ may have a case to answer in torture’ — human rights lawyer

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Correction­s appears to have broken the law by keeping two women in a segregatio­n unit for four months at Auckland Region Women’s Correction­al Facility, a human rights lawyer says.

The potential law breach emerged afterrnzye­sterday revealed inmates Karma Cripps and Mihi Bassett were bombed with pepper spray during their four-month stay in the segregatio­n unit, known as the pound.

Cripps, an asthmatic, was gassed with four canisters of pepper spray in her closed cell, which Correction­s said was a tactic called “cell buster extraction”, designed to incapacita­te unco-operative inmates so they could be removed from their cells.

Lawyer Douglas Ewen said the conditions the women faced may also have breached the Internatio­nal Convention Against Torture.

“New Zealand may have a case to answer in torture. Now, that is something no western nation should ever have to put its hand up and admit.”

Inmates usually stayed two weeks in the unit and if they were to be kept there for longer than 14 days, the prison needed the permission of the chief executive. To keep a prisoner there for longer than three months, a judge must visit the facility.

The prison’s deputy director, Alison Fowlie, admitted she didn’t know the rules existed. That shocked Ewen. “The fact that the second-incharge in the prison is unaware of a fundamenta­l obligation is of extreme concern,” he said.

The law required continual review of the risk of holding a prisoner in the pound because segregatio­n could cause real psychologi­cal damage, Ewen said.

Correction­s chief custodial officer Neil Beales said he could not address any of the specifics of the treatment of inmates raised by RNZ because what happened to those prisoners was subject to an ongoing court case.

However, he defended the use of the cell-buster technique, which he said had only been used 24 times since 2016, as a lawful, legitimate tool.

“I would prefer to use pepper spray than have to send staff in with a shield, where they’re going to have to physically restrain somebody using lock holds and wrestle them to the ground, in a small confined area, where there may be weapons. “The area may be dangerous, because of people having flooded it out, or ripping furnishing­s from the wall, or even trying to set fire to places. I would rather use pepper spray every time than physical force.” He said Correction­s was not prevented from using it against inmates who had asthma. Cripps’ partner Mihi Bassett attempted suicide after her mental health deteriorat­ed following months in the unit.

Bassett was sent to segregatio­n after starting a fire in the jail, known as Auckland Women’s Prison, which caused about $20,000 worth of damage. Cripps was moved to the unit later.

RNZ also revealed inmates at the prison were made to lie face-down with their heads by the toilet before being given food and had to show guards their used hygiene products to receive new ones.

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