B.C. civil rights group sues federal government over solitary confinement
VANCOUVER — A civil liberties group has filed a lawsuit against the federal government over solitary confinement, two years after the top courts in British Columbia and Ontarioruled there has been a violation of prisoners’ constitutional rights.
The B.C. Civil Liberties Association alleges in a notice of civil claim filed in British Columbia Supreme Court that the conditions of solitary confinement infringe on federal inmates’ charter rights, arguing they are exposed to physical, psychological, social and spiritual trauma.
Grace Pastine, the association’s litigation director, said thousands of inmates are still being isolated in their cells for 22 hours a day or more with little access to human contact, despite promised reforms.
“Wardens at federal prisons continue to isolate people for days, weeks and months at a time as a routine form of prison management,” she told a news conference Wednesday.

