Pubdate: Fri, 13 Jun 2014 Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) Copyright: 2014 New Zealand Herald Contact: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300 Author: Greg Ansley Column: In Australia Page: A33 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) DEATH EXPOSES JAIL DRUG HORRORS Mother-Of-Three Has Heroin Overdose at Age 41 Despite Warnings to Authorities That She Was Drugged Out In February last year Tracey Brannigan, long-time drug addict and convicted dealer, partied with her lover in a highrisk cell at Sydney's Dillwynia women's prison. The next day she was found dead of a heroin overdose. Engineering student Boyan Slat is seeking funding for his ocean clean-up contraptions. Brannigan's tragic story unfolded during an inquest this week, revealing a series of failures by prison authorities including the last, final, mistake of not heeding warnings that the 41-year-old mother-of-three was bombed out of her head. More serious were the repetitions of earlier assessments that Australian prison authorities have lost control of the supply and consumption of a range of illicit drugs by inmates, and have yet to fully deal with the dayto-day consequences. International experience shows the problems Australian authorities face. A study by prominent researchers Heino Stover and Ingo Ilja Michels reported in the Harm Reduction Journal, described drug use among prisoners as endemic. Drug dependence among European inmates rose to as high as half of male prisoners, and an even higher 60 per cent for women. Up to two-thirds of hard drug users continued to inject after they were jailed and 24 per cent of injecting prisoners said they started in jail. In the United States, soaring numbers of people jailed for drug-related offences led to high rates of drug use in prisons. As many as 20 per cent injected for the first time in jail. Studies in Australia have repeatedly shown most prisoners - as many as one in seven - used drugs before they were jailed. Many continued their use inside. Although detailed figures of the extent of drug-taking among prisoners are rare, drug-test information obtained by the Adelaide Advertiser under Freedom of Information laws gave some indication: one in five prisoners in South Australian jails returned positive samples during testing in 2012. The most common drugs were cannabis, buprenorphine - a painkiller also used for treating addiction that is causing growing concern - and amphetamines such as crystal meth. Despite security measures, the drugs keep coming. Many are simply thrown over a prison fence or smuggled through visitor centres. New technology is also being employed: in one case drugs were reportedly dropped into a prison using a drone. After Brannigan's death, prison authorities found four syringes in a shampoo container. Within the nation's prison systems, pragmatism has forced new policies. As well as increasing efforts against smuggling, many jails use drug detection dogs in cell blocks and test prisoners' urine for illicit substances. They also run detoxification, methadone treatment programmes and counselling services, and test for blood-borne viruses. But the drugs keep coming. Hundreds of people are charged with smuggling narcotics into prisons every year and authorities admit that illicit drug use is common and widespread inside cellblocks. The inquest into Brannigan's death has given yet another human face to the problem. An addict who had been jailed for a large part of her life since she was 19, Brannigan was in jail when she gave birth to the youngest of her three children. The inquest heard that despite knowing of Brannigan's addiction and repeated overdoses in custody, and being warned earlier in the day by a prisoner advocate that she was stoned, guards returned her to a high-risk cell and left her unsupervised for 17 hours. Detective Inspector Gary Jones told the inquest Brannigan and her cellmate Lauren Ironside were in a relationship, in which Ironside supplied drugs for sex and protection. Brannigan died after the two held a "drug party" involving heroin and prescription drugs. One guard told the inquest an entire unit at Dillwynia had to be treated for intoxication after a "flood" of drugs in 2010. The prison's security manager, Leanne O'Toole, estimated that 75 per cent of inmates were abusing drugs. Brannigan's overdose mirrored another in the New South Wales country town of Junee three years ago, in which 28-year-old armed robber Anthony Van Rysewyk, died of a heroin overdose in his cell. As with Brannigan, the signs of intoxication were missed by guards. Coroner Sharon Freund also found that illicit drugs were readily available to Junee inmates. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom