Pubdate: Tue, 20 Sep 2011 Source: Morning Sun (Mt. Pleasant, MI) Copyright: 2011 Morning Sun Contact: http://www.themorningsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3938 Author: Linda Gittleman, Gratiot Managing Editor NO SHORTAGE OF WOULD-BE DRUG SMUGGLERS IN ST. LOUIS PRISONS Smuggling marijuana into the prisons by way of a waste paper basket in the visitor's restroom may seem like a good idea at the time, but would be smugglers might want to come up with a Plan B. Waste baskets in the visitor's restroom is the first place police check. The arrest of [name1 redacted], 30, of Detroit, was helped along by the phone conversation she had had previous to the drop with one of the inmates at the St. Louis Correctional Facility. The phone conversations are recorded. "Although they talked in code, (officials) believed a drop would be made that day," said Gratiot County Prosecutor Keith Kushion. So the visitors bathroom was checked before [name1 redacted] entered and immediately after she left. The taped condom full of marijuana was found inside a bag inside the wastebasket on July 30. The plan depended upon an inmate porter to pick up the marijuana and deliver it to the inmate, Kushion said. After pleading guilty to attempted furnishing of contraband to an inmate, [name1 redacted] was sentenced Monday to two years probation and ordered to serve 60 days in jail, Kushion said. Since there is no shortage of those willing to try smuggling contraband into the prisons in St. Louis, [name1 redacted] case wasn't the only one in Circuit Court Monday. Latisha Calloway, 30, of Detroit, pleaded guilty to attempting to furnish contraband to an inmate at the Central Michigan Correctional Facility on Sept. 4. While visiting with her boyfriend, she purchased a bag of Cheetos in the visitor's room. Hidden in her bra were six condoms, three filled with marijuana and three filled with tobacco. She attempted to put the condoms into the Cheetos bag, when she was spotted by a corrections officer. "They do this all the time too - potato chip bags, Cheetos, whatever," Kushion said. Calloway is scheduled to be sentenced Nov. 14. Attempted smuggling of contraband into a prison carries a maximum penalty of 2.5 years in prison, Kushion said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.