Pubdate: Mon, 16 Jun 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Gloria Galloway CANADIAN INMATES FACE NEW DELAYS IN RETURNING OTTAWA -- Canadians convicted of crimes abroad have been told they must now undergo security checks by Canada's spy agency before they can be transferred to a prison in this country. The process will delay the transfers for months - possibly even years - regardless of the type of crime committed and the threat the prisoners pose to public safety. Critics suggest the policy was introduced at the request of Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day, who does not approve of returning drug dealers to Canada to serve their time. But it has been left to the bureaucrats at the International Transfers office within Correctional Service Canada to pass on the news to prisoners and their families. "I have been told by the International Transfers office - and I know that clients' families who have been anxious over the situation of their loved ones have called and have also been told - that there is a new procedure in place to do what is called security checks," said Washington lawyer Sylvia Royce. Ms. Royce, who is handling a number of the cases, added: "And that it takes a long time." "There has been a tremendous slowdown" in sending prisoners back to Canada, she said. "I had a conversation with [those responsible for prisoner transfers] in which they told me that about 50 cases had piled up in the minister's office and that they came back to the International Transfers office with instructions to institute a new security-check process." The Public Safety department offers conflicting responses about what is being demanded. Melanie Carkner, a department spokeswoman, wrote in an e-mail that "CSIS security screenings are not required for all current international prison transfers." That conflicts with what families of the prisoners say they have been told. Melisa Leclerc, a spokeswoman for Mr. Day, said the requirement that the prisoners be checked by CSIS is not new. That also conflicts with what the families say they were told. "The International Transfer of Offenders Act [introduced under the Liberals in 2004] is clear, and there is a requirement for the Minister to consider several factors prior to consenting to a transfer," Ms. Leclerc wrote in an e-mail, "one of which is if the offender will, after the transfer, commit a terrorism offence or criminal organization offence." One of the people affected by the policy is a 57-year-old former firefighter who was severely injured on the job in 1989. Emotionally distraught, he helped an acquaintance attempt to transport marijuana from Texas into Canada. The man, who does not want his name used, was arrested and released on bond and returned to Canada. But guilt haunted him. After living as a law-abiding citizen for years, he voluntarily went back to Texas last year. A Texas judge sentenced him to four years in jail and the U.S. Justice Department quickly approved his transfer back to Canada. But Canadian authorities have put up roadblocks. A bureaucrat in the Prisoner Transfer office told the man's wife that all of the transfer requests piling up in Mr. Day's office for approval were sent en masse to CSIS on May 20. "I spoke with the International Transfer office," the wife said, "and I said 'Is this a requirement for all transfers?' And she said, 'Yes, it is a new requirement, an additional security requirement, that is now a requirement from Mr. Day's office. Regardless of the crime, everyone must go through this CSIS background terrorism check.' " Since Mr. Day took over the Public Safety portfolio, prison transfers have dropped off dramatically. According to statistics released by the department last week, transfers ranged from 79 to 96 between 2001 and 2006, but fell to 56 the year the Tories took office. "In one fell swoop of an ideological pen, Mr. Day has once again demonstrated his unwillingness to follow through on a treaty obligation that Canada has established over the years," said Liberal MP Dan McTeague. "What we have is a minister who has now decided to find another route in order to do what he wanted to do originally, which is not to have anyone come in under his watch." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath