N.S. court rules law allowing ‘dry celling’ of prisoners discriminates against women
TRURO, N.S. — A portion of a federal law that kept a New Brunswick woman in a form of solitary confinement for 16 days on suspicion she had concealed drugs inside her vagina has been ruled unconstitutional by a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge.
The decision today by Justice John Keith says a section of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act infringes on protections in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms against discrimination on the basis of gender.
The judge, who heard the case a year ago in Truro, N.S., gives Parliament six months to reform the law so that it no longer discriminates against women.
Keith was referring specifically to a section of the federal law that permits the practice of “dry celling,” in which prisoners are placed in a cell without running water or toilets so their human waste can be examined for concealed drugs.