Pubdate: Thu, 17 Dec 2009 Source: Times & Transcript (Moncton, CN NK) Copyright: 2009 New Brunswick Publishing Company Contact: http://timestranscript.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2660 SPECIALIZED TOILET HELPS FIGHT DRUG SMUGGLING HALIFAX - Some federal prison guards should be able to scratch a crappy job from their duties next year when Correctional Service Canada takes delivery of new gear to counter drug smuggling. The official name for the equipment is "banned substances recovery equipment." It's a toilet that allows guards to safely recover drugs that a person may be trying to sneak into a prison by carrying them in their digestive system. Right now, if guards suspect someone is carrying drugs in that manner, they direct the person to a bathroom to see if they will pass the drugs. That puts the guards in the unenviable position of trying to recover the drug-filled baggie or condom from other contents of the suspect's bowels. But the specialized toilet being ordered, called a Drugloo and manufactured by a British company of the same name, should make that process a distant and smelly memory for correctional officers. According to Drugloo's website, feces are washed into an attached recovery container by automatic sprays. Water and antimicrobial fluids are used to separate and wash any drug packages. The package then goes into a sealed chute and from there is dropped directly into an evidence container, without anyone having touched the item. The company says the toilets protect employees from the threat of disease or contamination while respecting the rights of the person being detained. It also prevents someone from flushing the evidence away. Correctional Service Canada is expected to have the toilets by March. Spokeswoman Caroline McNicoll said drugs inside prisons have serious impacts, including violent criminal behaviour, interference with programs for inmates and the spread of disease. "The detection of contraband, especially drugs, is a serious challenge for security staff, in part due to the number of persons who enter and leave an institution during any given time period," she said. McNicoll didn't have statistics on the number of people charged or the amount of drugs seized at the country's federal jails, but said cannabis products such as marijuana and hashish are seized most often. The toilets will be installed in eight Canadian prisons from Quebec to British Columbia, and the tender documents include the option for up to six more units. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D