August 11-12: the CSC and the CYA Principle
The Segregation Review Board met on August 11 to conduct a number of
reviews, including the cases of Mr. McKenna and Mr. Forget. The Board
recommended that both prisoners be released from segregation. The warden,
back after a week’s vacation, accepted the recommendation in relation
to Mr. McKenna, and he was released from segregation that day. In the
case of Mr. Forget, the warden asked the IPSO to prepare a risk/threat
assessment prior to making her final decision.
The next day, I asked Warden Marshall for her assessment of the situation
at Kent in the aftermath of the Grenier murder. She was acutely aware
of the critical nature of her decision on Claude Forget’s release from
segregation. Many prisoners had told the administration that Mr. Forget’s
release would not pose a risk to him and that it could help to resolve
some outstanding problems in the population, but there was other information
to the effect that "blood will flow if Forget is released." That was the
reason she had asked the IPSO to prepare a statement of risk. Gary Allen’s
death two years earlier, within hours of his release from segregation,
was very much on her mind.
It is not difficult to understand the warden’s response. She is accountable
to the Commissioner of Corrections for her judgements. There was enormous
pressure on her to ensure that decisions made following the incidents
of "Deadly July" did not precipitate further incidents compromising safety
or security. If Brenda Marshall approved the release of Claude Forget
and there was further bloodshed, she would wear it. This was the inescapable
reality that Warden Marshall faced: like any other warden, in making decisions
she had to take her job into account. In addition to the legal criteria
for segregation, there is, therefore, an important criterion that remains
unwritten: "The prisoner’s release to the population shall not jeopardize
the security of my position as warden." In most hierarchical structures
of management, including the Correctional Service of Canada, this is known
as the CYA (Cover Your Ass) principle.
It is precisely because of the immense responsibility and accountability
that rests on a warden’s shoulders that decisions which have a major impact
on a prisoner’s rights and liberties should be made by an independent
adjudicator, someone who can exercise the best possible judgement in light
of the available evidence, weighing the competing risks involved, without
the fear that his or her job is on the line. Page 1 of 1
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