Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Nix Judge's Order To Clean Jail Cells Of Feces, Vomit, Blood: Lawyer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2015 12:58 PM
    Vancouver police refused to clean up their act even after reports of feces, vomit and blood smeared across jail-cell walls led a British Columbia judge to demand more hygienic lockup conditions for two prisoners, says a lawyer.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Catherine Bruce ordered the Vancouver Police Department to provide more sanitary accommodations, along with proper food and bedding, for terror suspects John Nuttall and Amanda Korody. The pair began spending their nights in the Downtown Eastside facility when jurors started deliberations on Sunday.
     
    "It was reported to me by my client that the conditions were horrendous and unhygienic: blood smeared on the walls, a toilet that was disgusting, a thin blanket for overnight, no food," said Korody's lawyer Mark Jette on Thursday.
     
    "Leaving aside the fact that it's disgusting, it's not healthy," he added. "Who knows what diseases those things may contain. You may end up infecting someone with HIV or tuberculosis."
     
    A jury found Nuttall and his wife Korody guilty on Tuesday of planting homemade pressure-cooker bombs on the front lawn of the B.C. legislature on Canada Day two years ago.
     
    While Bruce's order to the Vancouver police carried no legal weight, Jette said it was an attempt to assert "moral authority" — an attempt that ultimately failed.
     
    "We were advised later that day through the court registry that the Vancouver jail would not meet the criteria set out in (the judge's) direction," said Jette. "So they just frankly refused."
     
    As a result, the jury's schedule was shortened to accommodate transporting Nuttall and Korody to and from their remand centres, in Coquitlam and Maple Ridge, respectively.
     
    The accused spent a total of two nights in separate cells at the Vancouver lockup.
     
    "I'm of the view that the way we treat our prisoners is a reflection of the degree of civility of our country," said Nuttall's lawyer Marilyn Sandford, who explained that her client had complained of the same cell conditions as Korody.
     
    "I think it reflects very poorly on the city and that there's no excuse for it."
     
    The Vancouver police declined to comment, citing security reasons.
     
    "We would not put anyone's safety at risk by commenting on a particular case," wrote Sgt. Randy Fincham in an email.
     
    He estimated the number of prisoners who move through the Vancouver jail at roughly 14,000 per year.
     
    The Ministry of Justice said in an email that police have sole responsibility for their own lockups and it's an established practice for sheriffs to take an accused to a local facility if a jury sits late.
     
    Doug King, a lawyer who has taken on many police-accountability cases, drew a link between unsanitary cell conditions and the underlying issue of jails being forced to grapple with inadequate resources.
     
    "Especially when you talk about cleanliness issues and general upkeep of the jail, if the guards and staff are not capable of doing that, that's a pretty good indication that they're understaffed or under-resourced," he said.
     
    Earlier this year Vancouver police dismissed a complaint from a man claiming a similar experience to that of Nuttall and Korody.
     
    "He alleged that the wagon smelled of urine and feces, the jail cells were dirty, and that the food provided to him was inadequate," read a report to the Vancouver Police Board.
     
    Police said this was the first such complaint they had received.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Blockbuster US $70-Billion Shell-BG Deal Could Weigh On B.C. LNG Plan

    Blockbuster US $70-Billion Shell-BG Deal Could Weigh On B.C. LNG Plan
    CALGARY — Royal Dutch Shell's US$70-billion deal to buy Britain's BG Group could mean fewer contenders in British Columbia's LNG race.

    Blockbuster US $70-Billion Shell-BG Deal Could Weigh On B.C. LNG Plan

    Orthodox Mennonite Man In Manitoba Pleads Guilty To Assaulting Children

    Orthodox Mennonite Man In Manitoba Pleads Guilty To Assaulting Children
    WINNIPEG — A man from an Orthodox Mennonite community in Manitoba has pleaded guilty to repeated assaults on several children.

    Orthodox Mennonite Man In Manitoba Pleads Guilty To Assaulting Children

    Quebec To Proceed With Scaled-back Plans To Develop Its North

    MONTREAL — Premier Philippe Couillard is proceeding with plans to develop the northern area of Quebec but they will be less ambitious than those of his predecessor.

    Quebec To Proceed With Scaled-back Plans To Develop Its North

    8 Ontario Farms Quarantined In Scramble To Contain Bird Flu Found On Turkey Farm

    8 Ontario Farms Quarantined In Scramble To Contain Bird Flu Found On Turkey Farm
    TORONTO — Eight poultry farms in southwestern Ontario have been placed under quarantine as agricultural authorities scramble to contain an outbreak of a bird flu virus found on a turkey farm near Woodstock.

    8 Ontario Farms Quarantined In Scramble To Contain Bird Flu Found On Turkey Farm

    Toronto Dating Website For Married People Seeking Affairs Drops Suit Against South Korea

    Toronto Dating Website For Married People Seeking Affairs Drops Suit Against South Korea
    TORONTO — A Toronto-based dating website for married people seeking affairs has dropped its lawsuit against the government of South Korea after a court in that country overturned a decades-old law banning adultery.

    Toronto Dating Website For Married People Seeking Affairs Drops Suit Against South Korea

    Liberals Seek Probe Of NDP MPs' Allegedly Improper Use Of Riding Offices

    Liberals Seek Probe Of NDP MPs' Allegedly Improper Use Of Riding Offices
    OTTAWA — The secretive body that ordered New Democrats to reimburse almost $4 million in mis-spent parliamentary resources is being asked to investigate a new allegation of improper spending by NDP MPs.

    Liberals Seek Probe Of NDP MPs' Allegedly Improper Use Of Riding Offices