Guard in B.C. prison needed chest compressions after drug exposure, says union
Three prison guards in British Columbia were sent to hospital, one needing chest compressions in the ambulance, after inhaling what they believed to be fentanyl powder that was “sprayed” around a cell by a combative inmate during a fight with officers, their union says.
The toxic substance exposure happened at Pacific Institution in Abbotsford, B.C., on June 11, when three officers entered a cell to conduct a routine search, the union representing federal prison guards said on Monday.
John Randle, Pacific region president for the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers, said the inmate dispersed so much of the drug during the fight in a bid to destroy the evidence that the officers’ vests were “covered in the white powder.”
All three officers showed “signs of overdosing,” while two other guards who entered the cell to help after the fight broke out were also exposed but did not require hospitalization, he said.


