Pubdate: Thu, 10 May 2007 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Sarah Chapman, Calgary Herald STRIP SEARCHES NOT ENOUGH TO STOP PRISON DRUG FLOW Inquiry Hears How Smuggling Led To Death Despite strip searches, inmates have still been able to smuggle contraband into the Calgary Correctional Centre, the centre's director testified in court on Wednesday. The testimony was part of the ongoing fatality inquiry into the death of Dale Patrick Woodcock, 43, who was found unresponsive in his cell on June 4, 2005. A toxicologist determined the cause of death was an overdose. "Obviously, our first line of defence is a thorough strip search . . . on every offender," Ed Vandal, director at the centre, told Judge Terry Semenuk and lawyers for Woodcock's wife, the City of Calgary and the Crown prosecutor's office. "The strip searches are very thorough." The strip searches require the offender to disrobe, then follow the instructions of corrections centre staff. No physical contact is made between the offender and the staff once clothes have been removed. If necessary, offenders are taken to the hospital for a cavity search to be performed by a medical doctor, Vandal added. He added there are no plans to change the way strip searches are conducted. However, Vandal said changes have been made to procedures since Woodcock's death. The Correctional Service of Alberta recently obtained a drug dog and getting a second dog is a possibility. The dogs -- which can be used to sniff drugs in cells or on offenders -- were previously contracted from the Calgary Police Service or the RCMP, said Vandal. He added all offenders, including intermittent servers who serve time only on weekends, are now seen upon arrival by registered nurses at the Calgary facility. At the time of Woodcock's death, inmates had been smuggling in drugs by placing them in plastic capsules from Kinder Surprise chocolate eggs, then inserting them in their rectums, longtime correctional centre worker Robert Milton said he was told by an inmate. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek