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Prison assault allegations reported to police 3 months after brought forward

The Nova Institution for Women is seen in Truro, N.S. on Tuesday, May 6, 2014. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

The Correctional Service of Canada is apologizing for wrongly saying it called police right away when it heard allegations that a guard in a Nova Scotia institution had sexually assaulted a female inmate.

On Wednesday, the service that operates federal prisons said it notified police “as soon as the allegations of misconduct were brought forward” but it has changed its story following questions from The Canadian Press.

READ MORE: 3 women file lawsuit alleging repeated sexual assault by Correctional Service guard in N.S.

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The corrections service now says it received allegations of sexual assault by a correctional officer at the Nova Institution for Women in Truro in December 2018 but didn’t contact police for three months, while it conducted an internal investigation.

The Correctional Service says it followed Treasury Board guidelines in putting the officer on administrative leave during that investigation, and contacted police with details from the review on March 29.

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READ MORE: Ottawa ordered to pay $20M for putting mentally ill inmates in solitary confinement

Truro Police Chief David MacNeil said this week his force got a complaint about a sex assault at Nova Institution on March 27 and opened an investigation the next day, but he refused to say any more about the timeline with the case still open.

The correctional service now faces a lawsuit from three women in the case.

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