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At a B.C. jail, staff fear rot, anti-rat culture could cause more prisoner escapes

Posted on: Jul 11, 2026 13:30 IST | Posted by: Cbc
At a B.C. jail, staff fear rot, anti-rat culture could cause more prisoner escapes

A poky that has held the likes of series slayer henry m. Robert Pickton, state of war criminals and Canada’s most notorious gangsters awaiting trials in its segregation cells is in an internal spiral.

There has been a shadow at the pretrial centre ever since July 21, 2022, when gang murderer Rabih Alkhalil, 38, escaped the high-security facility, sparking an ongoing Combined Special Forces Unit investigation into who may have helped him.

Former correctional officer Naila Sheikh was Alkhalil’s case manager at the time of his escape in 2022. On May 28, 2026 she was charged with breach of trust, personation and unauthorized computer use. It is unclear if her recent charges are related to that incident.

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Current and former staff say the facility is vulnerable to security breaches and prisoner escapes. They describe a culture of "organized madness," where systemic issues have created an environment where misconduct thrives and alarms are silenced.

Staff say overflow from a shuttered Vancouver remand centre put pressure to hire more guards, and standards lapsed. Some new hires did not last.

“There’s been numerous times they’ve had to walk a lot of staff off the premises, so the question is: What’s their criteria?” said Levan Francis, a former correctional officer. 

“No one really wants to work in that environment,” said Francis, who won a landmark discrimination case at the Human Right Tribunal against the B.C. Government after he faced racism and a “poisoned” work environment at the pretrial centre.

“There’s a stain now.”

“Ensuring the integrity of our correctional system is of paramount importance."

Two men from Ontario and one from B.C. Were eventually charged with aiding Alkhalil's escape.

Ottawa's Edward Ayoub, 48, and John Potvin, 49, and Ryan van Gool, 46, from Harrison Hot Springs, B.C., are facing direct indictment with conspiracy to commit prison breach and prison breach. 

Alkhalil was arrested in Qatar in 2025 after three years on the run on Canada’s most wanted list.

He was charged along with Hell’s Angel Larry Amero and Dean Wiwchar in a 2012 gang murder.

His brazen escape prompted Surrey pretrial guards to take a closer look at his other co-accused, Wiwchar — and that was how they discovered damaged windows and a hacksaw hidden in his cell.

Before Alkhalil's recapture, the convicted murderer told the sentencing judge that he “felt like the soldier left behind."

“I still crack a smile at the thought of my co-accused embracing his freedom.”

Others say they noticed them, but didn’t file formal complaints, fearing reprisal and a general lack of management support.

B.C.'s Public Safety Ministry said it has reviewed the facility's security since the incident.

Sheikh turned herself in on June 29, a month after a warrant was issued for her arrest. She was released on conditions and is next scheduled to appear in Port Coquitlam court on Aug. 20.

The charges against the former officers are "deeply concerning," said Krieger, though she noted that most of the 1,300 provincial officers serve with integrity.

Meanwhile, Alkhalil wasn’t the first to escape from the B.C. Facility.

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In 2007, an Iranian gang kingpin named Omid Tahvili fled after bribing a security guard to give him a janitor's uniform and lead him out the prison doors. The guard was sentenced to three years in jail, but Tahvili was never recaptured. The year after, prisoner Dean Sykes posed as another inmate who was scheduled to be released and walked out a free man. Sykes was later arrested in Hope, B.C. 

“In both these cases, we need to consider the fact that there was the human element involved," the provincial solicitor general said after the second escape.

They pointed to specific failings, such as a malfunctioning security camera, despite several requests for a fix. Several described how the escape was facilitated by what's believed to have been a strategically timed alert that developed into a rare "code yellow."

Usually indicating a lockdown due to a security issue, the alarm pulled staff away from the isolation area where Alkhalil was held during a vulnerable time at shift change.

Compounding these failures was the troubling discovery of contraband, including iPhones, drugs, and syringes, found in isolation cells in which Akhalil was held before the escape and during the COVID-19 pandemic when visitors were shut out, according to correctional officers and witnesses.

Retired 20-year career correctional officer Andrew Materi described his former workplace as “organized madness."

“They know better, but they don’t want to change things."

Materi described how staff who do complain face blowback, sometimes finding a slice of cheese stapled to their paystub, indicating they were now seen as a "rat."

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Inmates will pay “top dollar” for phones to help them run their businesses from the inside, and some staff are tempted, he said.

“You have a staff member who only makes $75,000 a year, but you have an organized crime member who's worth millions of dollars.”

Officers still working at the centre say contraband found in the cells that housed Alkhalil and Amero in the months before the 2022 escape was seized, but say evidence in a manager's safe was tampered with, so no charges were laid.

“It [raises] the question of corruption and who's bringing it in? Especially in living units with high-profile inmates that have financial means," Materi said. "It's a red flag. You know something's going on.”

He noted that serial killer Robert Pickton's old cell was specially equipped for high-profile suspects. But Amero and Alkhalil were housed in a unit the floor below it at the time of the latter's escape in 2022.

“The paradox is that the isolation unit holding the most dangerous inmates is the least secure area of the building, as it has the least number of doors to pass through to escape,” said Materi, who was often positioned in central control as one of the “pilots” of the building.

Now, with new, stricter bail reform legislation on the horizon, many fear more inmates will flow into the doors, adding more stress to the North Fraser Pretrial Centre.

The security lapses have made officers uneasy and less trusting of each other, Materi said.

“There's been cases where I've seen staff members who do not get along say, ‘If there's a code yellow on your unit, I'm going to take my sweet time,’” he said.

“Now, of course, prove they said that. Prove it.”

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