Pubdate: Sun, 20 Apr 2008 Source: Bangkok Post (Thailand) Copyright: The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. 2008 Contact: http://www.bangkokpost.co.th/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/39 Author: King-Oua Laohong Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) MOBILE PHONES NOW JAMMED IN PRISONS Corrections Department Cutting Off Contact Between Drug Dealers On The Outside And Inside To Stem Flow Of Narcotics Devices to block mobile phone signals have been installed at three maximum security prisons to cut off contact between prisoners and drug dealers on the outside, Corrections Department chief Wanchai Rujanawong said yesterday. Mr Wanchai said the devices were installed after a series of attempts to contact dealers and bring drugs into the prisons. Last week some crystal metham-phetamine, or Ya Ice, was discovered hidden inside the cover of a pocket book sent to Lueng Pak Lun, a Korean convicted of drug offences, in zone 10 of the Khlong Prem Central Prison. The discovery triggered a thorough search of the prison. Prison officials suspect the drug was ordered by mobile phone and delivered through mobile phone contacts inside and outside the prison. The department is conducting a trial run of the devices used to block mobile phone transmissions. It is the latest technology to be installed after the previous signal jammer equipment used by prison authorities disrupted the transmission of mobile phone signals in nearby houses. "For this reason, we opted for a device which works with more specific scope within the prison," Mr Wanchai said. The signal blocking devices are under trial at Khlong Prem Central Prison, Bang Kwang Prison and the Central Correctional Institute for Drug Addicts, which houses high-profile drug traffickers. The department chief, however, admitted it was difficult to screen items sent in by mail. He said some narcotics were sealed inside cups of yoghurt or in bottles of lotion. Mr Wanchai added that one prisoner was found to have brought in drugs stuffed in condoms which were inserted in his anus after he came back from trial in court. "It's the same old tricks, like putting speed pills inside toads which have had their organs removed and are then tossed over the prison walls. But now guards are intercepting them," he said. Mr Wanchai said X-ray machines at the three correctional facilities have been useful in screening suspicious items. The department also asked the post office to photocopy the identification cards of people who mail parcels to prisons. Mr Wanchai said prisons are rejecting items sent through post offices at some hypermarkets after drugs were found in packages of consumer products. There have also been complaints from foreign convicts, who have been upset that parcels addressed to them had been rifled through. Some of the cases ended in lawsuits against prison staff and wardens. Prisons normally must obtain a warrant from a court to search prisoners' mail. The Justice Ministry, however, is now seeking a change of the law to leave it up to the prison commander to decide whether to authorise a search. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom