Home / SCC to rule on judicial oversight of prison law and life

SCC to rule on judicial oversight of prison law and life

Ottawa – The Supreme Court of Canada will release its decision on Thursday, March 27, 2014 in Diane Knopf, Warden of Mission Institution, et al. v. Gurkirpal Singh Khela. The BCCLA is an intervener in the case.

This case concerns the critical role that the provincial superior courts play in ensuring that prisoners have access to meaningful judicial review when their rights inside the prison walls are violated. Among the issues on appeal in this case is whether the right to habeas corpus should be construed narrowly or broadly. A habeas corpus application is a legal action that allows a prisoner to challenge in provincial court conditions of his confinement, such as placement in solitary confinement.

The BCCLA will argue that a robust interpretation of the right to habeas corpus is essential to maintaining the rule of law in the Canadian prison system. Locked out of sight and separated from family and community, prisoners are vulnerable to abuse. A succession of commissions of inquiry and correctional investigator reports, from the Arbour Commission that condemned the strip searching of women prisoners by male guards at the Kingston Prison for Women, to the 2008 report of the Correctional Investigator on the death of teenager Ashley Smith, have documented recurring human rights abuses in the correctional system. The BCCLA’s position is that the right to habeas corpus is necessary to safeguard the human rights and civil liberties of prisoners, and to ensure that the rule of law is applied behind prison walls.

The BCCLA is represented in this case by Professor Michael Jackson, Q.C. of the University of British Columbia Faculty of Law and Joana Thackeray of Gall, Legge, Grant & Munroe LLP.

The BCCLA’s argument in the case is available here >>

What: Supreme Court of Canada to deliver its decision in Diane Knopf, Warden of Mission Institution, et al. v. Gurkirpal Singh Khela

When: Reasons for judgment will be delivered on Thursday, March 27, 2014 at 6:45 am PST / 9:45 am EST

Where: Supreme Court of Canada (Ottawa, ON)

Who: Lawyers for the BCCLA available for comment

CIVIL LIBERTIES CAN’T PROTECT THEMSELVES