Pubdate: Wed, 10 Jan 2007 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: James Gordon, The Ottawa Citizen Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) MORE DRUGS SLIP PAST PRISON SECURITY New Detection Methods Fail To Stem Flow Into Federal Institutions The importation of illegal drugs into Canadian prisons has increased over the past five years despite several new programs designed to curb the flow, an internal government audit shows. While there were about 850 drug seizures in federal institutions during the 2001-2002 fiscal year, that number climbed to 1,100 in 2003 and dropped slightly to approximately 1,050 last year. This, despite the introduction of Ion Mobility Spectrometry devices (which can detect if people have been handling drugs) at all institutions, detector dogs and the renewal of the federal government's National Drug Strategy in 2003. While the audit notes "general compliance" with interdiction strategies, it adds "given the National Drug Strategy indicated that (Correctional Service of Canada) 'will not tolerate drug or alcohol use or the trafficking of drugs,' there is a need for improvement." The partially censored report shows most of the drug seizures were from inmates' cells and the balance from other areas within federal institutions. Twenty-seven per cent of inmates selected for random drug testing either refused to provide a urine sample or failed the screening. The statistics show, the audit concludes, "that despite the CSC's extensive drug interdiction activities, illicit drugs are still entering institutions." The audit of the correctional service's interdiction strategy is critical of many areas, including the department's management of "human sources" of information about drug activity inside institutions. "These human sources may be invaluable for preventing drugs entering into institutions," the audit says, adding "a number of security intelligence officers have expressed a need for a policy to provide firm guidelines on the use and management of human sources." Direction was found to be lacking in processes for handling of sources, filing and sharing information and consistency between CSC and other law enforcement agencies. Auditors also expressed concern over a potential weak link in the interdiction strategy -- screening of prison staff. While a heavily censored section of the report suggests staff members are routinely searched using X-ray machines, hand-held and walk-through scanners and manual search methods, several lines of censored text suggest gaps in the system. Visible text does note that detector dogs and ion scanners are not consistently used in staff searches. "The use of these drug interdiction tools on staff would mitigate a significant risk, while ensuring that CSC is doing everything possible to consistently detect and deter illicit drugs from entering institutions," it says. Meanwhile, some of the tools available to prison staff were being used improperly or not at all. Two of the 11 applicable institutions' ion scanners have sat dormant since December 2005 due to a lack of supplies, while procedures weren't being followed in other cases. There's no useful way to track the effectiveness of the machines anyway, the auditors also found. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek