
Judge approves B.C. inmate's class action over 'inhumane' prison isolation during pandemic
As chair of the inmate wellness committee at his prison, Dean Christopher Roberts was allowed to go cell to cell at Mission Institution to speak with inmates through the bars during some of the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The men in the medium-security facility in Mission, B.C., were being isolated in their rooms to prevent the spread of COVID-19. By April 2020, they were allowed out of their cells for 20 minutes a day — time that Roberts claims they could choose to use only for a shower or a phone call to family.
"Within the first month of solitary confinement some men were showing me, [as] I went door to door, where they had developed bed sores and body pain from being sedentary and lying in bed all day," he wrote in an affidavit filed in B.C. Supreme Court.
"Sadly, I encountered some men who had taken to scarring their face with long slashes and bloody lines. Others, who had slammed their heads into the wall, so consumed by the helplessness, isolation and fear of the unknown that they didn't even understand."
Roberts, 56, is the lead plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit against the federal government that was greenlit in B.C. Supreme Court on Friday. The case claims the medical isolation that began in Canadian prisons in March 2020, when COVID-19 was declared a global pandemic, subjected prisoners to "inhumane rights restrictions" that amounted to solitary confinement.
Class members include any inmate incarcerated in a Correctional Services Canada (CSC) prison during a COVID-19 outbreak declared at a site after March 11, 2020. Inmates would be eligible if they were confined to their cells for 20 or more hours a day and deprived of the chance to interact with others for less than two hours a day for 15 or more consecutive days, the ruling said.
Patrick Dudding, Roberts's lawyer, estimated the class could include anywhere from hundreds to thousands of inmates.
"We welcome the court's decision, and we'll take this through the next steps," he said in a phone interview on Wednesday.
Inmates didn't know when isolation would end: lawsuit
Mission Institution was declared COVID-free by mid-May 2020, but significant restrictions continued until mid-July, the judgment said.
"That's 23'/4-hours-a-day in a 7x10 foot box with your head 18 inches from the toilet," Roberts said in his affidavit.
"I cannot stress enough that worse than the solitary confinement was the absence of routine. On any given day staff seemed to invent a new routine for showers and phonecalls. We were left in our cages anxious, worried, angry what the day would bring and when would relief come."
The United Nations' minimum rules for the treatment of prisoners, called the Nelson Mandela Rules, define solitary confinement as isolation for more than 22 hours a day and say solitary confinement that lasts longer than 15 consecutive days amounts to torture.
During the pandemic, health-care professionals and advocates recognized the challenges that came with preventing the spread of COVID-19 within prisons. Typical advice for slowing the spread — like regular handwashing and physical distancing — could be virtually impossible in crowded prisons.
Researchers in the United States, where overcrowded prisons faced similar health challenges, say medical isolation could be a beneficial public health tool if done properly. Mental health advocates and public health researchers have said officials needed to find ways to differentiate purposeful medical isolation from punitive solitary confinement to help inmates' cope psychologically.
WATCH | Former Canadian diplomat recalls 6 months in solitary confinement:
Michael Kovrig describes 'gruelling, painful' solitary confinement and interrogation
8 months ago
Duration 0:50
Michael Kovrig, a former Canadian diplomat who was held in China for nearly three years, tells CBC News chief correspondent Adrienne Arsenault about the interrogation he endured during his six months in solitary confinement. 'They are trying to bully and torment and terrorize and coerce you' into believing you're guilty, even though you're not, he says.
"The only commonality that solitary confinement should share with quarantine and medical isolation is a physical separation from other people," physicians from the University of California wrote in the Journal of General Internal Medicine on July 6, 2020.
"This means that people in quarantine or medical isolation should have enhanced access to resources that can make their separation psychologically bearable—for example, television, tablets, radio, reading materials, and means of communicating with loved ones—since they are enduring isolation for the greater good, not for punishment."
The Mental Health Commission of Canada said medical isolation that is run the same way as solitary confinement"poses significant human rights risk and should be done only as a last resort." It recommended low-risk prisoners or those near the end of their sentences be released from correctional facilities to reduce the pressure.
In a statement on Wednesday, CSC said it was "committed to reducing the risks of COVID-19 in all its operations and keeping offenders, employees, and the public safe" during the pandemic.
"During that time, we worked with public health experts, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), local public health agencies, our labour partners, and stakeholders to develop infection prevention and control measures to mitigate and contain the spread of COVID-19," it said in an email.
"First and foremost, the health and safety of offenders, our employees, and the public remains our top priority."
Attorney general says medical isolation 'entirely different'
In his lawsuit, Roberts claims the federal government's isolation policy neglected or violated inmates' Charter rights to protect life, liberty and security of the person.
The Attorney General of Canada argued the case shouldn't be certified as a class action because isolating inmates for medical purposes was "entirely different" from punitive solitary confinement, according to Friday's decision.
It also said Roberts wasn't a suitable plaintiff for the case, which it described as overly broad without enough clarity.
In his decision, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Michael Tammen ruled the lawsuit could go ahead. He said Ottawa could win the case on a few different points, like its argument that medical isolation isn't the same as solitary confinement or that the isolation was justifiable in an "unprecedented and unexpected" pandemic, but he said those would have to be decided at trial — "not at this preliminary stage."
None of the allegations have been proven in court.
Roberts has been serving a life sentence for the murders of his wife and twin sons in Cranbrook, B.C., in 1994. A jury convicted him of strangling his wife and one son, before setting a fire at the family home that killed the second son.
Roberts, then 26, was also convicted of trying to kill his adopted three-year-old. The eldest child survived after being rescued from the burning house.
He has maintained his innocence and pursued exoneration with the University of British Columbia's Innocence Project for more than 15 years, claiming his confession was the result of a flawed Mr. Big sting. He was granted the right to ask for a ministerial review of his case in 2021, seeking the opportunity to present fresh DNA evidence he says will prove his innocence.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
31 minutes ago
- CTV News
Poor air quality due to wildfire smoke across southwestern Ontario, including Waterloo Region, Guelph and Brant County
The view from the CTV News Kitchener tower on Tuesday, June 6 shows a haze over the skyline in Waterloo region as wildfires burn in northeastern Ontario and Quebec. (CTV) Environment Canada has reported poor air quality early Friday across southwestern Ontario. The agency stated the wildfire smoke will be expected into Friday afternoon and can cause trouble breathing and reduced visibility. Health risks Environment Canada said as the smoke levels increase, people over 65-years-old, pregnant people, youth and infants and people with existing illness and health conditions are more likely to be affected. Some individuals may experience symptoms such as irritation to the eyes, nose and throat, headaches and a mild cough. In some cases, serious symptoms such as wheezing, chest pains and a severe cough are possible. How to reduce impact Environment Canada recommends limiting going outside and to reschedule or reduce outdoor sports and other activities. Anyone working outside should consider wearing a proper-fitting face mask such as a NIOSH-certified N95. The agency said those inside should keep windows and doors closed as much as possible. With these measures in place, Environment Canada said though exposure to pollution is reduced, there may still be symptoms and health risks. Anyone who thinks they are having a medical emergency should immediately seek medical assistance.


CTV News
41 minutes ago
- CTV News
First case of dermo disease detected in Newfoundland and Labrador oysters
Oysters harvested in Canada are seen at Bryan Szeliga's Fishtown Seafood in Haddonfield, N.J., Thursday, March 6, 2025. (AP, Matt Rourke) Federal food safety officials say they have confirmed the first case of dermo disease in oysters from Newfoundland and Labrador. Inspectors detected Canada's first case of the disease in November in New Brunswick, and it has since been found in oysters from Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says the disease has now been detected in oyster samples from Notre Dame Bay, N.L. The CFIA notes the parasite doesn't pose a risk to human health or food safety, but says the illness can cause increased oyster mortality and decreased growth rates. It says dermo, also known as perkinosis, can spread from oyster to oyster and also through water contaminated with the parasite. The agency says it's working with the province and Fisheries and Oceans Canada to increase oyster monitoring, control the movement of oysters in the area and look for the source of the illness. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 5, 2025. The Canadian Press


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Clear Medical Imaging employees finally have first collective agreement
Employees at Clear Medical Imaging finally have a first collective agreement. An arbitrator announced the three-year agreement on May 29 after the employer and the union representing its workers entered binding arbitration on March 20. Unifor Local 2458 secretary/treasurer Mike Kisch said they are glad there is finally a collective agreement in place, but they didn't get everything they hoped for. 'It's a great foundation; it definitely levels the playing field,' he said. 'Now we're working on resolving a few issues that we need to work with Clear Medical Imaging on. We need to basically recreate a relationship.' The labour dispute started when the workers walked off the job on Oct. 25, 2024, to back demands in their first-ever contract negotiations with the company. The eight-week-long strike ended on Dec. 20, 2024, after the two sides failed to reach a deal, despite working with a provincial conciliation officer for more than three months. A forced vote initiated through the Ontario Labour Relations Board was also rejected by the members by 96 per cent, which led to binding arbitration. Key issues during the labour dispute revolved around wages, benefits, mandatory overtime, job security, and the contracting out of services. Kisch said they lost around two dozen employees during the negotiations to local hospitals or other clinics. 'Primarily it had to do with the wages, so we're hoping with this collective agreement, it at least slows that down so we don't keep losing members, but we completely understand that if you can go to greener pastures, people are going to do that,' he said. Unifor Local 2458 represents approximately 120 employees who work as x-ray and ultrasound technologists and clerical and administrative staff across 11 Clear Medical Imaging locations in Windsor, LaSalle, Tecumseh, Essex, and Chatham. Kisch said they want to be a partner with the employer. 'We definitely want Clear Medical to be successful for a few reasons, one being the important services they provide to all of our communities in Windsor-Essex and Chatham-Kent, but also for our members to have good, secure, well-paying jobs,' he said. - Written by Rusty Thomson/AM800 News.