Pubdate: Tue, 08 Jul 2008 Source: Buffalo News (NY) Copyright: 2008 The Buffalo News Contact: http://www.buffalonews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/61 Author: William Morgan Jr. Note: William Morgan Jr. is a professor of criminal justice at Erie Community College. DRUGS IN PRISON ARE MAJOR SECURITY THREATS New York State Court of Appeals judges recently made an ignorant and short-sighted ruling that a small amount of marijuana in prison is not considered dangerous contraband, and reduced the sentences of both inmates and visitors caught introducing contraband into state correction facilities. Contrary to the court's ruling, any illegal substance smuggled into a correctional facility is dangerous and causes major security, death or injury threats to both staff and inmates. This is a court creating the law rather than merely interpreting what legislatures enacted. As the courts and legislatures slip back into this period of liberal ideologies of law and penology, a slippery slope emerges. Inmates are not held accountable for their actions, as the need to sell drugs in prison is more important than rehabilitation to a nefarious population in need of programming. There is little consequence for visitors to correctional facilities who choose to smuggle contraband to inmates. The biggest caveat to this ruling is how to deal with employees who attempt to smuggle contraband into facilities; employees can be charged only with a misdemeanor and not necessarily lose their jobs or face major consequences. Contrary to a News story, drugs do not flow like wine in prison. Most substances come from visitors and packages that inmates receive from the outside. If one thinks about the logic, it is more difficult to get drugs into a prison, therefore, the risk/price ratio goes up and the cost is 10 times higher than street-level value. However, the cost is not only monetary; drugs wreak havoc on the correctional facilities. Illegal drugs in prison have caused disturbances that resulted in injury and death for correctional officers and inmates. Major disturbances have been caused because of gangs that vie for control of the drug trade in correctional facilities. Inmates who do not share ill-gotten gains may be assaulted or killed due to the scarcity of drugs. The few employees who choose to enter into criminal activity cause a major threat to security for officers and civilians as the lines blur between the criminal and the respectable. Most correctional agencies around the nation check the inmates' bodies after visits to discourage introduction of contraband into facilities. Many others use drug-sniffing dogs to check the living areas of inmates and to inspect visitors for drugs; states that use these antidrug tools have a noticeable decline of drug activity in prison. To inspect visitors via drug-sniffing dogs is a commonsense approach that facilitates safety, security and rehabilitation in the correctional environment. In this age of downsizing police and correctional agencies, it is incumbent upon administrators to use proactive tools to prevent criminal activity. The most preventable deterrents include harsh penalties for violators and proactive, anti-drug pursuits. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath