Pubdate: Wed, 06 Sep 2006 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2006 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Paul Cherry RELIGIOUS COUNSELLOR CAUGHT WITH ILLICIT DRUGS Guards Find Stash As He Enters Prison Police are investigating a religious counsellor after drugs were found in his suitcase as he tried to enter the provincial detention centre where he worked. The man, known as a pastoral animator, was working at the Riviere des Prairies detention centre on a temporary basis. He was arrested Sunday afternoon after guards discovered a small quantity of illicit drugs. The drugs were not identified. "Information was circulating that led us to believe the animator was involved in bringing drugs" into the detention centre, said Michel Hubert, president of the Syndicat des agents de la paix en services correctionnels du Quebec, the union representing jail guards. Based on that information, management at the Riviere des Prairies centre asked guards to search the counsellor the next time he entered. He was replacing the detention centre's regular chaplain, who is on vacation. When the guards looked inside his suitcase, they noticed a pouch of tobacco that appeared to be new and unopened. They unsealed it and found a small quantity of drugs. Hubert said he believed there were no more than a few ounces of drugs in the pouch. He also said it is believed the drugs were destined for a member of a Montreal street gang who is serving time at Riviere des Prairies. "But that is unconfirmed information," Hubert said. Drugs are a serious problem in provincial detention centres, he acknowledged. "It's a plague. It can't be described any other way. It is extremely difficult to get conclusive results in drug rehabilitation programs with drug trafficking going on inside the walls." Sunday's arrest highlights a continuing problem in Quebec's detention centres, Hubert said, pointing out that guards are not well equipped to keep drugs out. Federal penitentiaries are equipped with scanners that can detect minuscule traces of drugs on a person, he noted. "We don't have any (scanners), and in some establishments guards are refused the right to search professionals who enter. That includes all professionals from the religious community," Hubert said. Surete du Quebec Constable Isabelle Gendron confirmed only a person working at the detention centre was arrested Sunday. The man was released that day; investigators plan to meet with him this week, she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom