Pubdate: Sat, 28 Sep 2002 Source: Post-Star, The (NY) Copyright: 2002 Glens Falls Newspapers Inc. Section: A Page: A1, front page, 3 col., left side, below the fold Contact: http://www.poststar.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1068 Author: Don Lehman, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) MOTHER, 75, CHARGED IN PRISON CONTRABAND CASE Police: Woman Tried To Smuggle Heroin Into Great Meadow FORT ANN -- A 75-year-old woman was arrested Thursday on charges she tried to smuggle heroin and $100 in cash to her son at Great Meadow Correctional Facility. Mary Weygant, of New Windsor (Orange County) was charged with third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and first-degree promoting prison contraband, both felonies, after she was caught with the drugs and money in the prison visiting area about 11:20 a.m., officials said. An investigator with the Inspector General's office of the state Department of Correctional Services confronted her as she waited to visit her son, and she confessed to having a balloon that contained contraband, said DOCS spokesman Mike Houston. The balloon contained 10 glassine envelopes of a substance believed to be heroin, Houston said. The woman was concealing the balloon on her person, but it was not in a body cavity, Houston said. She handed it over when confronted. Prison officials had gotten a tip she might be bringing drugs and contraband to the maximum security prison where her 40 year-old son, Lawrence Weygant, is serving a 25-years-to-life sentence for a 2000 second-degree murder conviction in Orange County, officials said. Houston said prison officials are looking into whether to charge Lawrence Weygant. Kevin Kortright, a Washington County first assistant district attorney who prosecutes most of the agency's prison cases, said Weygant was the oldest drug-smuggling suspect he could recall at the prison. "We've had a few mothers over the years but no one that old," he said. Kortright said $100 was a significant sum of money in a prison, where inmates aren't allowed to have cash. Drugs and cigarettes often sell for many times their street value in prison. "That's big bucks in a prison," he said. Houston said the Department of Correctional Services has a zero tolerance policy for those trying to bring contraband into a state prison. "Our staff continues to be very diligent in ensuring that no contraband of any sort finds its way into our facilities," he said. Weygant was arrested by state police from the Granville station and sent to Washington County Jail for lack of $10,000 cash bail or $20,000 bond. Staff writer Matt Volke contributed to this report. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl