A Canadian citizen was held
by immigration authorities for eight months in a top-security prison when he
was mistaken for a refugee with a different name. Now, he's suing the Canadian
government for C$10m ($7.6m, £5.7m).
When 47-year-old Olajide
Ogunye, born in Nigeria, woke up on the morning of 1 June 2016, he found his
home in Toronto surrounded by Canada Border Service agents.
"It took me five
minutes just to get to my car," he told the BBC.
Before he could drive off,
an agent presented him with a warrant for the name Oluwafemi Kayode Johnson, a
failed refugee claimant who had been deported from Canada in the 1990s whom the
immigration authorities believed had illegally returned to the country.
"That is not me,"
he told them. He showed them several forms of ID, including his Canadian
citizenship documents and a provincial health card. The agents told him they
would "sort this out", and drove him to their office where they
fingerprinted him.
There, they said his
fingerprints matched Johnson's and they booked him into Maplehurst Correctional
Complex, a maximum-security prison for dangerous offenders.
"I wasn't expecting
something like that to me as a Canadian citizen," Ogunye says.
For the next 248 days,
Ogunye would be incarcerated - first in Maplehurst and then in Central East
Correctional Centre, another maximum-security prison - while CBSA investigated
his case.
Now that he is a free man,
Ogunye is suing the government for C$10m for wrongful arrest and negligent
investigation.
CBSA spokesman Barre
Campbell told the BBC the agency is "reviewing the matter" and that
"it would be inappropriate" to comment further.
His lawyer, Adam Hummel,
says that the CBSA's investigation was marked by delays and procedural
irregularities that lengthened Ogunye's stay in prison and took a toll on his
mental and physical health.
"For them to keep
someone in jail for eight months... it is not really a good thing. I hope they
don't do this to somebody else and that is one of the reasons why I'm bringing
this to court," Ogunye says.
Hummel also says the CBSA
has never produced the fingerprint sample used to identify Ogunye as Johnson.
Ogunye moved to Canada from
Nigeria as a refugee with his parents in 1990, and obtained citizenship at 26
years old in 1996. He has several siblings in Canada, as well as two daughters,
both born in Canada.
At one point, his lawyer
arranged for him to be granted bail, if two bondsmen would swear to his
identity. The bondsmen swore that he was indeed Olajide Ogunye.
But according to the
statement of claim, the CBSA would not accept any proof that did not corroborate
their belief that he was Johnson because "fingerprints don't lie".
In prison, Ogunye says he
was assaulted by fellow inmates and fell into a deep depression and was placed
on suicide watch.
"I'm crying like 24/7
in jail," he says.
This is not the first time
Canada's immigration detention system has fallen under scrutiny.
A 2017 investigation by the
Toronto Star found that about 114 immigration detainees were being held in
jails and prisons for three months or more while the immigration and refugee
board reviewed their cases. Less than 1% of detainees who have been
incarcerated for six months or more are released, the investigation found.
Ogunye was one of the lucky
ones.
Six months after his
arrest, CBSA interviewed his brother and sister, according to the statement of
claim.
They confirmed he was their
brother Ogunye, not Johnson and in February 2017 he was released.
In his release report, the
investigating officer wrote that "the person in custody may be Olajide
Obabukunola Ogunye", the statement of claim says.
Since leaving prison,
Ogunye says he has lost his job at a hair salon, which he held for 17 years,
and his relationship with his daughters has deteriorated.
Matters may have been
complicated by Ogunye's own past criminal record. According to Hummel, CBSA
agents told his former lawyer that they did not believe Ogunye because of
charges related to credit-card fraud and impersonation back in the 1990s.
But his current lawyer says
his past is irrelevant.
"The minute he showed
him he was a Canadian citizen, everything that they were doing that dealt with
immigration was unlawful," Hummel says.

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