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          From Untrammelled Discretion to a Charter-Driven Regime
         
         Most of the prisoners I spoke to at Kent after the televising of the
        videotape from the prison for women were angered by the treatment visited
        on their sisters. They were well aware, however, that the humiliation
        and degradation they too experienced during strip searches did not register
        on the seismograph of public opinion. The issue of respect for human rights
        of all prisoners -- men and women -- engaged by the practice of strip
        searching, emerged in my study at Kent Institution and became the subject
        of a further round of intense scrutiny, albeit far less public than that
        which followed the events at the Prison for Women.
          The scant recognition of prisoners' rights under the pre-1992   Penitentiary
        Act   is nowhere better reflected than in the total absence of provisions
        addressing the power to search. It was left to the   Penitentiary
        Service Regulations   to fill the void; they did so by casting the
        power in the broadest possible terms, authorizing a staff member to search
        "any inmate or inmates, where a member considers such action reasonable
        to detect the presence of contraband or to maintain the good order of
        the institution" (S. 41(2)(c)).
          The Correctional Law Review Working Group, established in 1983, recognized
        that the open-ended power to search allowed by the Regulations did not
        meet the standards and protections the Supreme Court of Canada had established
        in some of its first decisions on the   Charter
        of Rights and Freedoms.  
          The Supreme Court of Canada has stated that the purpose
        of constitutionalizing the right to be secure against unreasonable search
        or seizure is to protect individuals from unjustified state intrusion
        upon a reasonable expectation of privacy. In effect, the court has established
        a minimum privacy threshold to be protected by the Charter. According
        to the Supreme Court of Canada, section 8 protects "persons not places"
        and the Charter then applies where there is a reasonable expectation of
        privacy, rather than being limited to the more narrow protection of property
        or privacy interests traditionally associated with a dwelling.
          It is clear that while incarcerated a person does
        not have as great an expectation of privacy as he or she would have in
        a dwelling house or private office. Nevertheless an inmate retains an
        expectation of privacy based on what is reasonable in the circumstances.
        The test of what is reasonable in the circumstances is not necessarily
        limited by present penitentiary conditions, under which inmates retain
        little privacy. Such deprivations of privacy are arguably a "functional
        prerequisite to the institutionalizing operation, deriving from the social
        organization of prisons and not from the legal status of persons found
        in them" . . .
          It should be remembered that today the right to privacy
        is recognized as fundamental in Canadian society, and protection of privacy
        is being accorded increased legal safeguards and protections. In line
        with this approach, every effort should be made to provide an inmate with
        as much privacy as possible.
          A further reason for protecting an inmate's reasonable
        expectation of privacy relates to the statement of purpose and principles
        of corrections, which recognize the importance of a safe and healthful
        environment in encouraging offenders to prepare for successful reintegration
        into the community. A reasonable expectation of privacy is an element of the kind of institutional
        environment which is conducive to this goal. Moreover, social scientists
        studying the escalation of violence in prisons have suggested that dealing
        with this problem through increases in search and seizure may be counterproductive.
        Increases in search may lead to increased violence by interfering with
        whatever amount of privacy an inmate may reasonably expect. Without legal
        protection, an inmate's rights in this regard may be thoroughly eroded
        and at the expense, rather than the benefit, of prison security. (Working
        Paper No. 5 at 65-66)    
         In its decision in   Hunter   v.   Southam  
          (1984) 2 S.C.R. 145   the Supreme Court, having recognized that section
        8 of the   Charter   was to protect individuals
        from unjustified state intrusions upon their privacy, set out the normal
        precognitions for a reasonable search. These are that, where it is feasible
        to obtain prior authorisation, such authorisation is necessary, usually
        in the form of a valid search warrant; the person granting the authorisation
        must be able to assess the conflicting interests of the state and the
        individual in a neutral and impartial manner; and that there must be objective,
        consistent standards identifying the point at which the interests of the
        state counter-prevail over the interests of the individual. In the context
        of subordinating the expectation of privacy to the needs of law enforcement,
        the standard is reasonable grounds to believe that there is evidence of
        an offence in the place to be searched, where such evidence is established
        upon oath. The Supreme Court recognized, however, "where state security
        is involved, or where the individual's interest is not simply his expectation
        of privacy, as, for instance, when the search threatens his bodily integrity,
        the relevant standard might well be a different one." Using   Hunter  
        v.   Southam   as a starting point, the Correctional
        Law Review articulated the nature of the   Charter  -driven
        inquiry required in the context of prison searches:
          The issue then is the degree to which the safeguards and protections
        afforded individuals outside prison must be applied within prisons. This
        may be restated in terms of whether the protections provided by the   Charter  
        are limited either through the meaning of "unreasonable" in section 8
        or through the limitation clause in section 1 of the   Charter  
        . . . . Section 8 wording indicates that everyone, including an inmate,
        has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure. (at
        68) Page 1 of 3
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