Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jul 2004 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Don Campbell, with files from Jennifer Chen LOCKDOWN ENDS AT CITY JAIL AS DRUG PROBE CONTINUES Officials Say Inmate Planned To Traffic Ingested Drugs Life at the Ottawa-Carleton Detention centre should return to normal today after a six-day lockdown of inmates was lifted yesterday. The lockdown was ordered late last Thursday when an inmate became ill after ingesting a quantity of drugs he allegedly intended to traffic into the facility, which houses 500 inmates. The Ottawa police drug unit continues to investigate the individual, who is expected to remain hospitalized for several more days. During the lockdown, each inmate in the facility was subjected to at least one strip search by the Institutional Crisis Intervention Team. Visitation rights were cancelled and inmates were confined to their cells 24 hours a day. By midday yesterday, the minimum and maximum security wings, along with the young offenders section, had been reopened. The three areas amount to 70 per cent of the prisoner population. Late in the day, the lockdown was also lifted in the remaining 30 per cent, returning the facility to full operation. Ottawa police, meanwhile, would only say they are assisting jail staff in the investigation. Police said the substance they recovered from the inmate has been sent for analysis and they are looking at whether more than one person could have been involved in the apparent smuggling attempt. "Our investigation keeps rolling," said Staff Sgt. Marc Pinault. A spokesman for the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services said the various wings of the facility were only opened after each cell and each area had been searched to the satisfaction of staff. "We only reopened every area once our search had been completed," said Bruce O'Neill. Mr. O'Neill would neither confirm nor deny the inmate who became sick was a drug mule, hired to bring drugs into the facility. "We do not comment on the nature of the investigation," said Mr. O'Neill. "It is a matter in the hands of Ottawa police." Meanwhile, inmates said they didn't feel the drug-related incident warranted the heavy-handed measures taken. Scott Smith, who has been at the facility for three weeks, said when inmates were locked in their cells on Thursday night, the guards "told us there was a shortage of staff." On Sunday, the intervention team arrived at Mr. Smith's unit to do an inmate by inmate search. "What they're putting you through, it's high stress," he said, "and if you don't react fast enough, bang, you get a smack in the side of the head." Although searches at the facility aren't out of the ordinary, the regular staff at the detention centre usually handles the procedure, said Mike Mars, another inmate at the centre. The introduction of the crisis intervention team and the force used seemed unnecessary, he added. He was assaulted more than once, after a guard asked him, "What are you looking at?" and slapped him in the face several times, Mr. Mars said. "There was really no need for all this because of one guy," he said, referring to the inmate found with drugs. Twelve of the 21 days he has spent at the facility have been in lockdown. Mr. O'Neill would not comment on the inmates' allegations, but said it is routine for the intervention team to be brought in to do searches at institutions, to support the regular staff. "A lockdown doesn't necessitate the use of force at all," he said. "If everyone behaves and does as they're asked, there should be no incidents and no need for any kind of force." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin