Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Premier Calls Inmate's 52-month Segregation 'Extremely Disturbing'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Oct, 2016 12:56 PM
    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says the treatment of an inmate held in segregation for four years is "extremely disturbing," but she is declining to call it torture.
     
    Adam Capay was in isolation for 52 months at a Thunder Bay, Ont., jail, held in a Plexiglas cell with the lights on 24 hours a day.
     
    After his case gained public attention, Capay was moved to a standard cell, with access to a day room, telephone and television, but is still being kept apart from the general population.
     
    The 23-year-old First Nations man is awaiting trial on a murder charge in connection with the 2012 death of another inmate.
     
    Critics have called Capay's treatment torture, but Wynne says while it is "extremely disturbing," she will not "make a judgment on a particular word or characterization."
     
    Wynne says as the province reviews the use of segregation in its correctional facilities, officials should be checking to see if any other inmates are in a situation like Capay.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Arrest Man In Attempted Abduction At Abbotsford, B.C., Bus Stop

    Police Arrest Man In Attempted Abduction At Abbotsford, B.C., Bus Stop
    A 16-year-old girl reported a man in a van drove past her several times as she waited for a bus.

    Police Arrest Man In Attempted Abduction At Abbotsford, B.C., Bus Stop

    Vancouver Man Involved In Two Shootouts With Police Pleads Guilty

    Vancouver Man Involved In Two Shootouts With Police Pleads Guilty
    Gerald Battersby appeared in provincial court Thursday in connection to the 2014 shootings in the city's Yaletown area and outside Science World.

    Vancouver Man Involved In Two Shootouts With Police Pleads Guilty

    Quarterly Report Shows Hot Real Estate Market Lifts B.C. Budget Into Billions

    Quarterly Report Shows Hot Real Estate Market Lifts B.C. Budget Into Billions
    Finance Minister Mike de Jong has released the figures in his quarterly report and says revenues for 2016-2017 are forecast to improve by $2.5 billion.

    Quarterly Report Shows Hot Real Estate Market Lifts B.C. Budget Into Billions

    2 Kirpan-Carrying Elderly Sikhs Ordered To Leave Dollarama Store In Winnipeg

    2 Kirpan-Carrying Elderly Sikhs Ordered To Leave Dollarama Store In Winnipeg
    Harpal Gill, says in the 16 years he has lived in Canada, he has never been told to leave a store because of his kirpan, a ceremonial dagger carried by Sikhs

    2 Kirpan-Carrying Elderly Sikhs Ordered To Leave Dollarama Store In Winnipeg

    Canadian Home Sales Drop For 4th Month, Lower Mainland Blamed For Slowdown

    Canadian Home Sales Drop For 4th Month, Lower Mainland Blamed For Slowdown
    The Canadian Real Estate Association says much of the move reflects the slowing activity in the Lower Mainland.

    Canadian Home Sales Drop For 4th Month, Lower Mainland Blamed For Slowdown

    British Columbia Health Minister Scraps Planned Hike To Medical Premiums

    The government announced in the February budget that rates for the Medical Services Plan would rise by four per cent next year.

    British Columbia Health Minister Scraps Planned Hike To Medical Premiums