Pubdate: Wed, 7 Oct 1998 Source: Courier Mail (Australia) Contact: Mark Oberhardt JUDGE SOUNDS WARNING TO JAIL DRUG SMUGGLERS PEOPLE who smuggled drugs into prisons almost certainly faced jail themselves, a Supreme Court judge warned yesterday. Justice Rosalyn Atkinson said people taking drugs into prisons also should realise they exposed the inmates to the danger of further punishment. Justice Atkinson was sentencing Kaylene Maree Sharpley, who admitted attempting to smuggle about 4g of cannabis sativa to her de facto husband in Woodford jail, north of Brisbane. It was the second time in two days Justice Atkinson had sentenced someone for smuggling drugs into a jail. Sharpley, 29, pleaded guilty to attempting to supply cannabis sativa at Woodford on August 13 this year. Prosecutor Col Rowntree said Sharpley admitted taking the drugs into the jail because she wanted to give her husband something to help his depression. He said the Crown accepted her husband was unaware she was bringing the drugs and that Sharpley was not, herself, a drug user. Barrister Terry Gardiner said Sharpley had no previous criminal record and was only trying to help her long-time partner. He said there had been no plan to smuggle drugs into the jail. Mr Gardiner said Sharpley had already been punished because prison authorities had barred her from seeing her husband for 12 months. Justice Atkinson said while such offences usually meant a jail sentence of some kind, the mitigating circumstances in Sharpley's favour meant she would impose six months' probation. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry