
Prisoners allege pandemic rules ‘wreaked havoc’ on minds in class-action lawsuit
VANCOUVER — Federal prison inmates who allege they were subjected to inhumane treatment during the COVID-19 pandemic have cleared a crucial legal hurdle to move forward with a class-action lawsuit filed five years ago against the Canadian government.
The British Columbia Supreme Court last week certified the class of inmates who claim they were “subject to inhumane rights restrictions” during the pandemic, including being confined to cells for 20 hours or more each day without meaningful contact with other people.
Plaintiff Dean Roberts, a multiple murderer incarcerated at B.C.’s Mission Institution, said in an affidavit the pandemic brought “chaos” as pandemic measures sent prisoners into despair, including one who sewed his lips together.
Roberts’ affidavit said the early days of the outbreak caused prison authorities to establish procedures that “wreaked havoc” on his mind, as inmates’ routines were upended by shifting pandemic procedures.