Advocates urge Liberal government to reduce number of women in prison
OTTAWA — Sometimes when she goes to the grocery store, all Alia Pierini can do is sit in the parking lot, unable to bear the idea of going inside.
She tries a different store, but Pierini, 31, often ends up coming home without the food she had planned to buy for lunch.
“I feel like a big loser, to be honest, but I can’t help it,” the former prisoner told a news conference Thursday as she described the lingering anxiety, panic and fear she still feels as a result of months spent alone in solitary confinement.
Pierini, from Chilliwack, B.C., was behind bars for 44 months after she was convicted on drug and assault charges. The last stretch of time she spent in solitary lasted a full eight months.


