Pubdate: Sat, 04 Feb 2012
Source: Toronto Star (CN ON)
Copyright: 2012 The Toronto Star
Contact:  http://www.thestar.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456
Author: Kenyon Wallace
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)

DRUGS, ALCOHOL, WEAPONS SMUGGLED INTO CANADA'S PRISONS RISING

Cocaine, alcohol, explosives, knives and handcuff keys are part of 
the haul at federal prisons as officials across the country struggle 
with a rising tide of contraband.

Between 2007 and 2011, the amounts of drugs, intoxicants, weapons and 
other unauthorized items confiscated by prison staff has steadily 
risen, in some cases by more than 170 per cent, according to 
documents obtained by the Star.

The number of seizures of intoxicants, for example -- LSD, THC, 
amphetamines and steroids, to name just a few -- rose to 1,779 in 
2010-11, up from 1,295 three years earlier.

Similarly, the number of seizures of weapons, including razor blades, 
homemade knives, firearms, explosives and pipes, rose by 22 per cent 
to 900 over the same period.

Perhaps most striking is the surge in seizures of other unauthorized 
items, such as cellphones, tattoo-making materials, lock picks and 
rope, from 991 to 2,697.

What the numbers don't say is whether the amount of contraband items 
smuggled into prisons is increasing or whether a recent push by the 
government to intercept these materials is paying off.

"I suspect that detection is getting better, so you do see an 
increase in seizures," said Howard Sapers, Canada's Correctional 
Investigator. "What we really don't know is whether drug use inside 
prisons is up or down, whether the presence of weapons is greater or 
lesser than it used to be."

In August 2008, the federal government pledged $122 million over five 
years in an effort to eliminate drugs from federal prisons. The 
funding went toward purchasing additional security equipment, such as 
drug ion scanners and X-ray machines, increasing the number of 
drug-detecting dog teams, and was intended to improve security 
intelligence both inside and outside prisons.

Among the goals, according to the government, are more successful 
rehabilitations and a safer system for guards and the country's 
14,000 federal inmates.

The Star also asked CSC for the number of employees disciplined for 
bringing contraband items into prison, but the agency said it did not 
have any such records. However, last September, Don Head, 
commissioner of the Correctional Service of Canada, told a 
parliamentary committee that it had dismissed 12 staff members that 
year for smuggling contraband into prisons.

Inmates caught with contraband material face a variety of sanctions, 
depending on the nature and seriousness of the transgression. 
Disciplinary measures include warnings, loss of privileges, an order 
to make restitution, fines, performance of extra duties, segregation 
from other inmates and, in some cases, the laying of criminal charges.

NDP public safety critic Jasbir Sandhu notes that while seizures of 
drugs appear to be increasing, the percentage of offenders testing 
positive for illegal drugs in CSC's own random urinalysis tests has 
remained steady at around seven per cent since 2007-08.

"They're spending $122 million to stop drugs coming in, but that 
hasn't happened because the urinalysis results haven't changed," 
Sandhu said. "The benefit to the taxpayer has been zero."

Jason Godin, regional president of the Union of Canadian Correctional 
Officers, which represents 6,800 federal officers, says tracking down 
contraband has become increasingly challenging as inmates develop new 
and creative ways to smuggle items inside.

"We've seen everything from things inside stuffed animals, tennis 
balls and drugs tied onto arrows and shot into the yard with a 
crossbow," Godin said.

He added that offender profiles have changed over the last 15 years, 
with a larger percentage of inmates more likely to be affiliated with 
gangs. The relationships developed with other gang members on the 
outside have resulted in greater complexity when it comes to 
smuggling contraband, he said.

While there is little debate over the need to have good detection of 
contraband materials, Sapers said he is alarmed by the government's 
recent shift away from treatment programs in favour of beefed-up 
security measures.

"We've been encouraging the service to increase its programming and 
treatment capacity, and often these are linked to addiction and 
mental health," Sapers said.

He noted that spending on substance abuse programs has fallen to $9 
million from $11 million in the past two years.

"The demand is there, the need is there and we're seeing much of that 
need being unmet."

CSC could not provide the Star with budget expenditures for 2010-11 
due to "temporary technical issues," but a 2010 overview of the 
agency pegs total corrections expenditures 2008-09 at $2.28 billion, 
up nearly 40 per cent since 2004-05. The average cost of keeping an 
inmate incarcerated rose from $87,919 to $109,699.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom