Pubdate: Mon, 23 Nov 2009 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2009 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://thechronicleherald.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Dan Arsenault DRUGS, ALCOHOL GROWING PROBLEM IN JAILS It's just before 9 a.m. on Oct. 9 and a uniform-wearing deputy sheriff allegedly meets a 22-year-old woman in a parking lot a few blocks from the Dartmouth provincial court building. They don't know that police are watching. The pair drive off in separate cars, and officers, who had started an investigation a few days earlier, quickly arrest the woman on Chadwick Street and nab the sheriff in the courthouse parking lot. Tyrone David is charged with 12 counts of possession for the purpose of trafficking cocaine, marijuana, hashish, ecstasy, morphine, Dilaudid, hydromorphone, Valium and amphetamines. Kathleen Mary Kierans, 22, receives three charges of trafficking in marijuana, hashish and Valium. Ms. Kierans is the girlfriend of known crime figure Jimmy Melvin, who was in the Central Nova Scotia Correctional Facility in Dartmouth at the time. Police say the drugs were destined for the jail. On July 14, a guard at Central Nova allegedly sees Halifax lawyer Anne Calder, 56, take something out of her documents and pass it under a table to an inmate/client in a meeting room there. Guards later search that inmate and allegedly seize tobacco and some white powder. Ms. Calder is charged with trafficking the prescription painkiller hydromorphone and possession of both hydromorphone and marijuana for the purpose of trafficking. She voluntarily suspends her practice that same month. The charges against Mr. David, Ms. Kierans and Ms. Calder have not been proven in court. Mr. David is on paid administrative leave from his job, pending the outcome of his case. The next court appearance for Mr. David and Ms. Kierans, who is out on bail, is Nov. 25. Ms. Calder's trial is set for April. On June 16, Steven James Meekins, 27, of Dartmouth misses a sentencing hearing for robbery and other charges at Halifax provincial court because he got too drunk on homemade booze while incarcerated at Central Nova. He is taken to hospital and his sentencing is rescheduled for a few weeks later. These three cases vividly illustrate the problems caused by drugs at the Dartmouth jail. "We have at least three incidents a week at Central," David Horner, the executive director of correctional services for the Nova Scotia Justice Department, said in a recent interview. The incidents are seizures, both from inmates and others, and include tobacco, lighters, homemade liquor, marijuana, cocaine, ecstasy, methadone, prescription drugs and other contraband at the jail. Provincial jails in Cape Breton, Yarmouth, Amherst, Antigonish and the youth facility in Waterville have had a total of 22 contraband seizures this year. Booze is always a problem and the swill that inmates manage to brew up actually sounds easier to make than it would be to drink. An inmate just has to sneak away after a meal or kitchen duty with a bit of sugar and bread, pieces of fruit or vegetables and then mix that with some water, seal it in a bag or container, hide it and wait for it to ferment. "When it is sealed off it is very difficult to detect," Mr. Horner said. So far this year, jail guards at the Dartmouth jail have seized more than 180 litres of booze, called "brew" by inmates and staff. They've also seized marijuana, hashish, cocaine, crack cocaine, ecstasy, store-bought alcohol, methadone and prescription pills. Central Nova has had five cases this year where inmates had to be taken to hospital after overdoing it on drugs or alcohol. Mr. Horner blames the amount of drugs at the jail on the size (it holds 336 inmates) and complexity of the institution. Central Nova has a lot of people who come and go, either as visitors or inmates, and it is both a provincial jail and a remand centre for people awaiting trial, sometimes on extremely serious charges. "Drugs in facilities are not a good thing," he said. "It increases the risk in a facility for staff and offenders both." Although he didn't provide complete details of their anti-drug measures, believing it could help people who want to beat the system, he said they do take a lot of steps to stem the flow. In terms of anti-drug tools, the jails have extra staff, parcel scanners, metal-detecting wands, numerous video cameras and BOSS seats. Some inmates have to sit in the BOSS chair (Body Orifice Security Scanner), which searches for metal in body cavities. Two new ion scanners at Central Nova can trace extremely small amounts of explosives and drugs on the clothes or skin of inmates. All inmates are strip-searched on arrival, but they can still swallow drugs in condoms - a dangerous practice - and pass them for later use. Others, often inmates serving weekends, may want to "suitcase" drugs into a jail by inserting them into their anal cavity and retrieving them later. Drugs can also be taped under a prisoner's or visitor's scrotum or breasts, hidden in clothes or parcels or brought in by staff, contractors or other visitors. Mr. Horner said jail staff simply can't perform a body cavity search on everyone. "You'd have to have some pretty good grounds in order to do that," he said. Inmates who are caught with contraband are usually segregated and otherwise penalized. Mr. Horner said drugs are a problem in all Canadian jails and he said his staff are "very committed to a safe environment and a safe workplace." Saint Mary's University criminology professor David Perrier, a former RCMP member who teaches courses in penology, agrees with Mr. Horner about the prevalence of drugs in jails. "You can get almost anything in an institution," he said. He said long-term inmates can put pressure on other inmates and visitors to help get drugs. Because inmates have a lot of time to cook up schemes, they can be quite creative, he said. He's heard of drugs being hidden in small orange balls, similar to those found at Central Nova's outdoor exercise yard, which were thrown over fences onto the property for inmates to pick up. There can be a pervasive drug culture inside institutions because of the population's habits and their free time. So, if an addict is in jail and feels pressure from other inmates to bring drugs in, he'll try hard to find a way, he said. "You're certainly not free to walk away from these influences," he said. He believes that prescription drugs, which can be highly addictive, are becoming the drug of choice in jails because they are more potent, and because of their small size, easier to smuggle. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D