e-516 (Correctional facilities)
- Keywords
- 8545-421-155-01 Government Response to petitions concerning correctional facilities
- Correctional facilities
- Drug trafficking and drug seizure
- Imprisonment and prisoners
- Inquiries and public inquiries
- Ion mobility spectrometry
Original language of petition: English
Petition to the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
- The Ion Mobility Spectrometry device (ion scanners) is a drug-detection system used by Correctional Service Canada (CSC) in federal prisons. CSC has admitted ‘false positives’ occur frequently because the scanners are extremely sensitive, searching for the presence of drugs down to the nanogram. Individuals may unknowingly pick up trace amounts of prohibited substances by touching items like money or credit cards, or using certain household and hygiene products;
- Ion scanners are improperly maintained due to lack of training and improper cleaning, increasing the frequency of false positives. This contradicts CSC’s Commissioner’s Directive 566-8-1 ensuring that “searching tools are routinely maintained and calibrated”;
- The risk of a false positive adds an additional layer of stress for individuals visiting their loved ones. A positive hit on the ion scanner may result in their visit being denied. Visitors are powerless to dispute the results of their screening;
- False positives may have serious consequences for inmates. Records of false positives go onto an inmate’s file and may affect future decisions regarding private family visits, transfers, and parole;
- CSC guiding policy (Corrections and Conditional Release Act, 1992) recognizes the important role families play in the rehabilitation of inmates, yet the ion scanner is serving as a barrier to essential family support.
- Open for signature
- December 6, 2016, at 4:14 p.m. (EDT)
- Closed for signature
- April 5, 2017, at 4:14 p.m. (EDT)
- Presented to the House of Commons
-
Matthew Dubé
(Beloeil—Chambly)
April 13, 2017 (Petition No. 421-01279) - Government response tabled
- May 29, 2017