Pubdate: Sat, 29 Nov 2014 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Page: A4 Copyright: 2014 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.montrealgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Paul Cherry FACEBOOK POSTS FROM INSIDE A PRISON 'Sunny Profit' Brags About Drug Use And Trafficking From Behind Bars Warning - This story contains language that could be offensive to some people. His real name is Michael Mines, a 30- year-old convicted drug dealer from Pointe- Saint- Charles. On Facebook, he uses the pseudonym Sunny Profit. There, for months in the comfort of social media cyberspace, he has apparently posted several updates about his frequent drug use inside the Cowansville Institution and later the Donnacona Institution, a maximum-security penitentiary near Quebec City. The most recent Facebook post by the federal penitentiary inmate was made this week, even after Mines was charged with drug trafficking behind bars. In some of his posts, Mines boasts of what drugs he has access to on a regular basis, despite being inside the maximum-security facility. The frequent postings - more than 30 this month alone - raise an obvious question: How does an inmate update his Facebook page when prisoners at federal penitentiaries do not have access to computers with Internet access? Mines appears to have used mobile phones, a popular form of contraband that is a growing problem for authorities at provincial detention centres and penitentiaries. Mines was able to update his Facebook status on Nov. 25, apparently from the provincial detention centre in Sherbrooke, despite having been charged the day before, in Granby, with drug trafficking inside the Cowansville Institution. Provincial court records confirm Mines is charged with selling methamphetamine, cocaine and hashish inside the penitentiary when he was at Cowansville on May 7. As the person named Sunny Profit on Facebook mentions, the case returns to court in January. "Tonight was my final night in Sherbrooke jail. What a final night it was, spent the day smoking up & the night doing lines getting zooted," Mines posted on his Facebook page on Tuesday. In his most recent post Wednesday, Mines described being transferred to the Riviere-des- Prairies detention centre - a provincial institution with an infirmary - most likely for health reasons. "I am currently at RPD for the 8th time," he wrote. "This time they put me in unit S3 top right, with the members of the Rizzuto Clan. Good People. It's an honour to meet them." Mines is serving a five-year prison term for a drug bust the Montreal police made two years ago in Point- St- Charles, during which officers seized a prohibited firearm. On March 22, 2012, Montreal police responded to a noise complaint at an apartment building on Knox St. When police arrived, Mines opened his apartment door, but then closed it quickly to prevent them from entering. The officers noticed something suspicious inside and waited for a search warrant before entering. They found 215 marijuana plants, 1,958 grams of dried marijuana, 61 grams of cocaine, 109 methamphetamine pills and more than $ 7,600 in cash. They also found a Ruger .22 calibre firearm that had been stolen in 2010, along with ammunition. At the time of the arrest, Mines was still serving an 18- month conditional sentence for a similar drug bust Montreal police made in 2010. "I should say the police note in their report that when they arrested him, ( Mines) told the police officers that he had just taken quite a bit of methamphetamine and he was not feeling well," said the prosecutor, who summarized the case for the court when Mines entered a guilty plea to eight charges on Sept. 24, 2012. Mines's postings on Facebook detail more drug abuse that may have seriously damaged his lungs. While they don't mention how he is able to update his Facebook page so often, it appears he has had access to mobile phones. Some postings mention recent events at the Donnacona Institution as they happened - such as the death of a fellow inmate on Sept. 16. "Early morning raids took place today as the sun was coming, a swarm of guards and the drug dogs suddenly rushed the ( cell) blocks & began cell searches," Mines posted in December, three days before Correctional Service Canada issued a press release about the surprise inspection. "Half the prison has been walking around all f -- ked up, whacked out of their minds, smoking dope & getting drunk. It was so blatant, perhaps we were asking for it." "Unbelievably, they didn't even bother me!!" Other posts on the page are very personal, including a thank you letter to people who sent him greetings on his birthday last Monday, and comments he makes about a respiratory problem. Other postings include photos taken inside either the Cowansville or Donnacona Institutions. While Mines would have posted the comments from Sherbrooke, Cowansville or near Quebec City at various times, Facebook lists their location as being from Montreal. Correctional Service Canada ( CSC) does not comment on anything pertaining to a specific inmate because of privacy issues covered by federal legislation. But CSC spokesperson Jean- Yves Roy said Friday no one serving a sentence inside a penitentiary is supposed to have access to the Internet. "In no way should a person who is incarcerated have access to the Internet. There are computers inside the establishments for training ( for example). There are also some inside the libraries, where they can write letters and things like that. But in no way are they linked to the Internet," Roy said. In recent months, other media have reported on cases where inmates have boasted on social networks about the access they have to contraband. In September, the Journal de Montreal published a story with photographs of an inmate at the Montreal Detention Centre posing with a $ 250 bottle of Cognac. The story prompted provincial Public Security Minister Lise Theriault to promise action will be taken in the future while saying: "Our prisons are not Club Meds." An internal briefing note prepared for federal public safety officials in 2012, obtained by The Canadian Press through the Access to Information Act, reveals the problem of mobile phones in penitentiaries is not a simple one for authorities. Guards at federal penitentiaries seized 137 cellphones across Canada during the first 10 months of this fiscal year, compared with 51 for all of 20082009. The briefing note states "New Zealand, Ireland, Australia, France and Mexico are using jamming technology in some of their prisons" and that the U. S. prepared similar legislation in 2009, but the bill died the following year." "As you are aware, access to a cellphone provides inmates the continuous potential to be involved in criminal activities outside the institution - including drug trafficking and organized crime activities - from within an institution," the note states before l i sting potential problems associated with jamming cellphone signals inside federal penitentiaries. One problem involves the possibility of the jamming of signals spilling beyond the perimeter of an institution and affecting the phones of private individuals or emergency responders nearby. Another is that the technology could interfere "in national security investigations being carried out by the RCMP or CSIS." The briefing note also mentions the possibility of health problems cell jamming can cause to humans and "on animal species such as bees." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D