Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lawsuit alleges illegal prison strip searches

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jul, 2020 05:35 PM
  • Lawsuit alleges illegal prison strip searches

A proposed class-action lawsuit alleges authorities illegally strip searched Canadian federal prison inmates hundreds of thousands of times over almost three decades.

A statement of claim filed in Ontario Superior Court says the federal Corrections and Conditional Release Act limits suspicionless strip searches to instances when an inmate might have had access to drugs or other contraband.

It accuses federal authorities of conducting such searches when inmates leave a prison or a secure area, enter a family visitation area or undergo a transfer to another prison. The statement says inmates were forced to remove all clothing, bend over, spread their buttocks, manipulate their genitalia, remove soiled tampons and squat naked while their bodily orifices were inspected.

The court action seeks an end to strip searches not authorized by federal law as well as compensation for the proposed class members.

The Canadian Civil Liberties Association's Abby Deshman, co-counsel for the class, says strip searches are incredible intrusions on individual liberty that must be clearly authorized and governed by law.

MORE National ARTICLES

Chiefs, governments to sign rights understanding after B.C. pipeline protests

Chiefs, governments to sign rights understanding after B.C. pipeline protests
A virtual signing ceremony on Thursday marks the start of a new relationship between the hereditary chiefs of the Wet'suwet'en Nation and the federal and B.C. governments after tumultuous gas pipeline protests earlier this year, say government leaders.

Chiefs, governments to sign rights understanding after B.C. pipeline protests

Suspect in alleged bus assault died of apparent overdose: transit police

Suspect in alleged bus assault died of apparent overdose: transit police
Metro Vancouver Transit Police say a suspect in an alleged violent attack against a woman on a bus died of an apparent drug overdose a week after the incident in April.

Suspect in alleged bus assault died of apparent overdose: transit police

Covid-19 Care and Relief at Guru Nanak Mission Hospital, Dhahan-Kaleran, Punjab

Covid-19 Care and Relief at Guru Nanak Mission Hospital, Dhahan-Kaleran, Punjab
Canada India Education Society needs your support for COVID-19 care & relief in Punjab.     

Covid-19 Care and Relief at Guru Nanak Mission Hospital, Dhahan-Kaleran, Punjab

Back to school too soon? What parents say | ZOOM Interview

Back to school too soon? What parents say | ZOOM Interview
Let's hear it from the parents and children themselves

Back to school too soon? What parents say | ZOOM Interview

Vancity CEO Tamara Vrooman to become Vancouver Airport Authority chief

Vancity CEO Tamara Vrooman to become Vancouver Airport Authority chief
The chief executive of Vancity is stepping down as head of the credit union to become chief executive of the Vancouver Airport Authority.

Vancity CEO Tamara Vrooman to become Vancouver Airport Authority chief

Trudeau cites uncertainty around pandemic as reason for budget delay

Trudeau cites uncertainty around pandemic as reason for budget delay
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau isn't saying when his government will provide a budget or fiscal update, citing economic uncertainty around COVID-19.

Trudeau cites uncertainty around pandemic as reason for budget delay