Public safety minister adds new rules on prison ‘dry cells’ for suspected contraband
OTTAWA — Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino issued new directives today on the use of “dry cells” to keep inmates from bringing contraband into federal prisons.
Prisoners who are suspected of concealing contraband, such as drugs, within their bodies are kept in a cell that has no plumbing fixtures on the assumption that any items will be expelled.
The ministerial direction to the Correctional Service of Canada requires prisons to provide written rationale when inmates are kept in such cells for more than two days.
It also requires the service to consider offenders’ “physical and mental well-being” when assessing that rationale.