Pubdate: Sat, 08 Sep 2007 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Richard Foot, CanWest News Service Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Stockwell+Day Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/John+Conroy TORIES DENY PRISONERS' TRANSFERS BACK HOME B.C. Lawyer Places Blame for New Policy With Public Safety Minister OTTAWA -- The Conservative government has become the first in a decade to deny Canadian citizens imprisoned in the United States the chance to serve out their sentences in Canada. Critics say this new trend reflects the personal political agenda of Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day. Documents from the Correctional Service of Canada, the agency that deals with international prisoner transfers, show that from 1997 to 2005, Ottawa never once denied an application to transfer of a convict from a U.S. to a Canadian prison. In 2006, the year the federal Conservatives took power and Day was appointed the minister in charge of correctional services, five transfer requests were denied, even though U.S. authorities had approved the transfers. This year, as of June, 12 transfer requests already approved by the U.S. had been turned down by Canada, while only two were approved. In the five years before Day took charge of the agency, the government approved an average of 38 transfers from U.S. prisons each year. In a column published last November in the Penticton Western News, a newspaper in his British Columbia riding, Day wrote of his disgust with prison transfers for convicted drug dealers. "B.C. dope dealers busted in the U.S. are demanding to be transferred back to cozier Canadian jails and reduced prison times," he wrote. "Memo to drug dealer: I'm no dope . . . Enjoy the U.S." John Conroy, a B.C. defence lawyer who represents several Canadian convicts whose transfers have been turned down by the government, blames Day directly for the policy. "Is Mr. Day acting in the public interest or because of a peculiar attitude he has toward various offences?" Conroy asks. Day declined a request for an interview, but his spokeswoman said the new policy is part of the Conservatives' hardline on crime, which the party campaigned on in the last election. "[The annual transfer numbers] show that the previous Liberal government put criminals' rights first," Melisa Leclerc said. "We do not. Canada's new government will always put the security of Canadians and their communities first." However, federal documents show the corrections agency believes transfer programs actually contribute to public security. A 2005 internal report on the agency's international transfer of offenders program said convicts who are transferred home fall under the watch of Canadian authorities, who can monitor their behaviour in prison and assess their risk to society. "The alternative is that the offender is deported to Canada [at the completion of his or her U.S. sentence] without correctional supervision-jurisdiction and without the benefit of programming and a gradual structured release into the community," the report says. Transfer programs and their related international treaties, the report says, "have proven to be successful and continue to be a permanent feature of international relations between our country and many others." Canada's International Transfer of Offenders Act says the minister has refusal discretion if the applicants are a threat to the "security of Canada," if they have abandoned Canada as their place of permanent residence, or if they lack family or social ties. The minister must also consider whether the foreign prison system is a threat to the offenders' human rights. Since 2006, Day has denied transfers to at least two Canadians on security grounds, including Arend Getkate, a 24-year-old Ontario man serving a 30-year sentence in Georgia for child molestation. "We now have not only confusion in the law," says Conroy, "but a situation where citizens in prison outside the country don't have the right to enter Canada, even when the country in which they did the crime is ready to send them back. "Many of these people are convicted of bad offences. Nobody's going to say we should ignore their offences. But citizens are still citizens, even after they're convicted of a crime, and the government can't just render its citizens stateless." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake