Pubdate: Mon, 09 Jun 2014 Source: Albuquerque Journal (NM) Copyright: 2014 Albuquerque Journal Contact: http://www.abqjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/10 Author: Ryan Boetel Page: A1 NEW DRUG PROBLEM FOR JAILS Narcotic Can Be Hidden on Greeting Cards, Child's Drawings There's a drug making its way into local jails - one that can be camouflaged on children's drawings, greeting cards or postage stamps. The Metropolitan and Sandoval County detention centers in the past year have deployed new techniques aimed at stemming the flow of the drug Suboxone, a fairly new narcotic used to treat opiate addiction. The jails no longer allows crayon drawings or greeting cards, and require letters to be written on white paper. MDC is the largest jail in the state with about 1,900 inmates, and drug smuggling is a constant concern, said jail spokeswoman Nataura Powdrell. She said Suboxone's popularity in jails has surged in the past year and a half and is now one of the more common drugs found. In addition to treating such addictions as heroin, morphine and prescription pain killers, Suboxone can produce its own high. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved it to treat opiate addiction in 2002, while methadone, another drug that treats opiate addiction, was introduced in the U.S. in 1947. Metropolitan Detention Center Capt. Frank Maestas said Suboxone leaves behind an orange color when it is applied to paper, so MDC now only allows black-and-white copied paper into the facility. A common way to smuggle the drug in was to apply it to children's artwork, he said. Late last year, jail policy was changed to require all letters be written on white paper and put in a white envelope, and no notes with crayon, marker or paint are allowed. The facility also no longer allows greeting cards. "It takes away the ability to camouflage" the drug, Maestas said. Sandoval County Detention Center Director Al Casamento said the jail made changes to the inmate handbook in March and no longer allow them to have paintings, greeting cards or stamps. The jail also no longer allows colored envelopes, he said. Casamento said officials at jails around the state have seen an increase in Suboxone being smuggled into detention centers in the past year and a half. "It's a statewide issue," he said. Casamento said the new jail policies three months ago appear to have decreased the amount of Suboxone in the SCDC, though exact numbers weren't available. But drugs still make it inside. The Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office has responded to MDC because of narcotics there 76 times from Jan. 1. to May 27 this year, according to sheriff's office records. And that doesn't account for the times jail staff found drugs but didn't call outside law enforcement, instead handling the matter internally, said MDC K9 officer Norman Rance. An internal punishment could come in the form of reducing an inmate's hours out of cell, for example. Rance said the history of the inmate caught with drugs, and the type and the amount of drug found, can determine whether the jail officials call for sheriff's deputies or punish the inmate on their own. Casamento said he is less likely to call police on an inmate caught with Suboxone compared to an inmate caught with another drug. He said law enforcement doesn't have a field test to prove if a suspected drug is Suboxone or not, and a lab must test the substance in order to charge the inmate with a crime, he said. Because it can be applied to paper, Suboxone is harder for jail staff to discover than other drugs, Rance said. The user can get high by putting the altered paper on his or her tongue. Rance said Suboxone applied to stamps or other documents can make them appear to be routine mail. At the Metropolitan Detention Center, Arek, a police dog, also plays an important part in finding the drug. The dog routinely peruses legal mail being sent to inmates because jail staff are not allowed to read it before giving it to the inmate. About six months ago, phony legal documents coated in Suboxone were daily finds at the jail. Those numbers have dwindled, and now jail staff stop Suboxone smuggling attempts two or three times per month, Powdrell said. Nonetheless, officials said inmates are thinking of ways to get around the jails' recently enacted policies. Rance said inmates at the jail have been overheard discussing using cinnamon, coffee, salt or oregano to try to throw Arek off the scent. "The inmates are talking about him," Rance said. "They are trying to find ways to trick the dog." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt