Pubdate: Mon, 21 Jun 2004 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2004 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Author: Fox Butterfield Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) INMATES USE SMUGGLED CELLPHONES TO MAINTAIN A FOOT ON THE OUTSIDE One early clue that Texas prisons had a new contraband problem was a letter, intercepted in a routine mail check, from a mother telling her inmate son that she was putting more minutes on his cellphone. Then there was the mother who wrote the warden complaining about the poor reception for her son's cellphone. But Texas officials say they learned the seriousness of cellphones' being smuggled into prisons only during a recent undercover investigation of a violent gang, the Texas Syndicate, when electronic surveillance showed that a gang member was making and receiving calls on his cellphone from the Darrington prison, near Houston. When investigators raided the inmate's cell, he flushed the phone down the toilet. But the prison has traps in its sewers, and when the authorities checked the traps, they found multiple phones. Prison officials across the country say inmates' possession of cellphones is a growing and serious problem. In recent months it has led to arrests or convictions of scores of inmates and of prison staff members who have smuggled phones to inmates. The authorities say they are concerned that inmates are using the phones to buy drugs, intimidate witnesses, plot escapes or oversee organized crime back home. Most prisons and jails in the United States have policies forbidding inmates to have cellphones. At least three states have taken the enforcement a step further by making it a crime for an inmate to have a cellphone. Under a law enacted last year in Texas, it is a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison for an inmate to possess a cellphone or for a person to give one to an inmate. The inspector general of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice is now prosecuting 50 cases of cellphone use by inmates, some involving multiple defendants. Iowa and Pennsylvania have recently enacted similar laws. "If these guys were just calling their girlfriends, it wouldn't be such a problem, but we are concerned about cellphones being used for drug deals and arranging crimes," said a senior law enforcement official involved in the indictment this spring of three Philadelphia jail guards accused of smuggling in cellphones, cigarettes and drugs in exchange for money. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is continuing. The Philadelphia authorities were alerted to the cellphone problem when a sweep of the city's three jails in 2002 turned up 61 illegal phones, the plea agreement said. "I'm not really surprised at inmates getting cellphones," said Joseph D. Lehman, the secretary of corrections in Washington State. "When people invent more ways to communicate, we shouldn't be surprised when inmates find ways to use the new technology. It's a continuing challenge." In the past two years, three cellphones have been found in Washington's prisons, Mr. Lehman said. One was found when an escaped inmate was captured in a wooded area near his prison. The phone may have played a role in the escape, Mr. Lehman said. Like several other states, Washington is looking into new technology that can determine if a cellphone is being used in a prison, then monitor it and jam its signal, Mr. Lehman said. But there are problems with trying to jam inmates' illegal phones, several prison officials said, because the technology is also likely to jam radios used by the prison and block cellphone signals in the surrounding area. As bad as the problem is becoming in the United States, it is worse in many foreign countries. Two years ago, in Brazil, inmates using cellphones organized simultaneous riots in 29 prisons in which 15 people were killed and 8,000 guards and relatives visiting the prisons were held hostage. Last year, an inmate was charged with running a drug ring from a prison in Ontario, Canada, and there have been reports of inmates illegally acquiring cellphones in Britain, Sweden, Thailand and India. Several states, including Arizona and Oregon, say they have not found any inmates with cellphones, a fact they attribute to strict policies of searching all visitors, and even staff members, with metal detectors every time they enter a prison. In New York City jails, inmates are regularly told to put their belongings and mattresses in the corridors to be run through a portable X-ray machine. Martin Horn, the commissioner of corrections and probation for New York City, said, "In any prison where there is a strong and effective search procedure," including searches of the cells where inmates sleep, "you are more likely to catch contraband like cellphones." In the 18 months Mr. Horn has been in the job, he said, only one New York City inmate has been found with a cellphone, and it had been smuggled in by a guard. Cellphones are harder to smuggle in than drugs, both because they contain metal and because of their size, Mr. Horn said. So the person doing the smuggling is more likely to be a guard or other staff member. "Often it is nurses," Mr. Horn said, "because they are manipulated into a romantic relationship with an inmate." In the Texas case, at the Darrington prison, it was a guard doing the smuggling, said John Moriarty, the inspector general of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. In April, the guard, Eula May Johnson, 22, was secretly videotaped in her truck in a Houston shopping center agreeing to smuggle a cellphone and a quarter-ounce of heroin to a gang member in exchange for $250 in cash. When she was arrested just after making the deal, she was found in possession of the phone, the drugs and the cash, Mr. Moriarty said. She was "a major supplier" of cellphones to the Texas Syndicate gang members locked up at Darrington, he said. But Ms. Johnson's lawyer, Charles Gaston, said she was "entrapped" and the victim of a prison system that did not want to go after higher-level officials. "She was a poorly educated black girl, whose only qualification was a high school diploma, making only $9 an hour," Mr. Gaston said. "The pay is so bad, it's obvious she is going to take the money." One reason Texas may have a worse problem with cellphones than other states is that inmates in Texas do not have regular access to phone banks to call family members or lawyers, Mr. Moriarty said. Inmates can make only one call every 30 days, provided they have no disciplinary problems and receive permission from prison officials. "That puts a real premium on cellphones as contraband in Texas," said Steve Martin, a former guard and general counsel for the Texas prison system who is now a prison consultant in Austin. And phones keep getting in. Earlier this month, after a tip from an inmate informant, a prison officer at Darrington opened a large jar of white sandwich spread and found a cellphone and a charger inside, sealed in a plastic bag. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake