Townsville Bulletin

THE DRUG SCOURGE

Police sources fear demand leads to crime

- Natasha Emeck, Tony Wilson and Caitlan Charles

Police and correction­s intelligen­ce officers are working to tackle a new, almost undetectab­le drug plaguing Queensland prisons.

Police have seen the black market drug trade of Buprenorph­ine – a prescripti­on opiate used to help wean people off ice and heroin – spread in jails across the state in the past 12-18 months.

At least 19 prisoners in the Townsville Correction­al Centre have been charged over the past six months with offences relating to the drug known among prisoners as “subbies”.

Dozens were charged following an intensive fourmonth joint operation with the intelligen­ce unit at Queensland Corrective Services and Queensland Police Service.

Northern Major and Organised Crime Squad officer in charge Detective Senior Sergeant Phil Watts said it was “extremely difficult” to detect Buprenorph­ine, which was sold under the brand name suboxone because it came in a thin clear patch and was easy to conceal.

Prisoners are using nappies, food and laundry to smuggle the drugs in to the jail in Townsville, according to inside sources.

Prison sources have also said family members were often smuggling the drug into the prison, or arranging elaborate drops while inmates are out of the correction­al centre for hospital visits.

“We’ve worked with Corrective Services to try and address that,” Sergeant Watts said.

“They’ve certainly put things in place to make it more difficult and to clamp down on any systemic issues which were leading to it being introduced to the prison community.”

Sergeant Watts said suboxone sold on the black market was quite expensive, reaching up to about $1000 a dose during Covid.

“It’s not confined to Townsville prison, there is quite a deal of intelligen­ce and evidence out there that it is being used widespread throughout prisons in Queensland,” he said.

“It’s problemati­c. Prisoners obviously have to pay for this illicit drug, and they put pressure on their families to find the funds – which are quite significan­t – and in our experience, that can lead to domestic violence issues that we’ve had to address.

“So it’s more than just a drug use problem, it does impact the community on the outside as well.”

Police are also working with Queensland Health to understand how often the drug is being prescribed in the community.

“We’re looking if there are people sourcing large quantities of it from various doctors, and we’re also working with Australia Post doing mail inspection­s because a lot of it is ordered online as well, and we pick it up through the post,” Sergeant Watts said.

A QCS spokesman said officers had foiled “several complex plans” to introduce drugs and other prohibited items into the Townsville Correction­al Complex.

The spokesman said several items were seized as part of the investigat­ion, including suboxone, methamphet­amine, tobacco, mobile phones and vapes, among many other prohibited items.

Townsville Correction­al Complex general manager Louise Kneeshaw said QCS had a zero-tolerance approach to bringing drugs into correction­al centres.

“A lot of hard work went into achieving this success, and it has been satisfying to hold so many prisoners accountabl­e for their illicit activity,” Ms Kneeshaw said.

“I want to thank all the officers involved in this investigat­ion in both searching and providing our intelligen­ce unit with those crucial bits of informatio­n that continue to help ensure the safety, security, and good order at Townsville Correction­al Complex.

“The continued collaborat­ion with QPS, the informatio­n sharing within the centre, the diligence and vigilance of staff is having real and measurable impacts.

“Correction­al centres are controlled environmen­ts for a reason, and introducin­g illicit substances endangers the safety of our officers, visitors and prisoners.

“Contraband has absolutely no place at our centres.”

Detectives from the major and organised crime squad charged 13 prisoners with 77 offences, including four offences for drug traffickin­g, 38 for drug supply, eight breaches of the Domestic and Family Violence Prevention Act and 27 offences against the Corrective Services Act for introducin­g prohibited items into Townsville Men’s Correction­al Centre.

“In total, 37 people, including prisoners and alleged offenders in the community, were charged with 210 offences, including traffickin­g in dangerous drugs, supplying dangerous drugs, money laundering, contraveni­ng a domestic violence order (aggravated offence),” the QCS spokesman said.

Royal Australian College of General Practition­ers specialist in addiction medicine Dr Hester Wilson said the “lucrative” black market for Suboxone would not be so rife in jails across Queensland if the state offered opiate substituti­on treatment programs for male prisoners.

Prison sources maintain that there are hundreds of prisoners at the TCC suffering from addiction to methamphet­amine and experts said the withdrawal symptoms could be severe.

Prison officers said suboxone, although obtained illegally, was quite common at the centre and was sold to addicted prisoners in strips for $300 to $400 per strip.

Inmates were going to extreme lengths to move drugs around the centre with at least one prisoner attempting to climb the wall of a unit to reach prisoners in another, and fell, severely injuring their leg.

“A tab just dissolves on or under your tongue, so it’s easy to take and easy to conceal and smuggle in,” said an officer who would not be named.

“The heavy ice users in here reckon the subbies really help them ease their withdrawal­s, so the market for them is going to remain strong.

“And subbies are the easiest drug to smuggle into the centre and they come in nappies, inside food and even through the official laundry.

“Plus, the PADD (passive alert drug detection) dogs can’t detect subbies when they check the visitors coming into the centre.”

Another officer said one prisoner had been found with about $7000 in cash that had been accumulate­d from the sale of suboxone.

t“Subbies are he easiest drug to smuggle into the centre and they come in nappies, inside food and even through the official laundry. Prison source

“So it’s a good business and its growing,” he said.

Townsville court officials said the first cases of prisoners charged with suboxone possession in the prison were starting to reach the courts.

“It’s serious because if a prisoner is convicted of an offence while serving a sentence then the new sentence is added on cumulative­ly, not concurrent­ly,” a court prosecutor said.

Suboxone can be used as an induction agent to stabilise someone in withdrawal during the medical detoxifica­tion process as well as for maintenanc­e treatment to promote recovery from opioid use disorder.

It consists of a combinatio­n of two drugs: buprenorph­ine (a partial opioid agonist) and naloxone (an opioid antagonist) and is administer­ed as a dissolvabl­e film placed either under the tongue or in the cheek.

Suboxone can result in physical dependence with long-term use due to the inclusion of buprenorph­ine, which is an opioid.

The Pharmacy Guild of

Australia, Queensland branch, spokeswoma­n said the drug was prescripti­on only and was done through a pain specialist managed through the Queensland Opioid Treatment Program.

“It can be prescribed by a GP if they have completed the Queensland Opioid Treatment Program,” the spokeswoma­n said.

The QOTP started in 1977 and provides treatment for opioid dependence, including prescripti­on opioids. The aim of treatment is to reduce the health, social and economic harm to individual­s and the community.

She said suboxone was normally prescribed for one month’s supply but it was issued daily, twice weekly and at a maximum, weekly.

“There have there been no reports of break-ins at pharmacies or warehouses where this drug has been stored in any quantity,” the Guild spokeswoma­n.

She said pharmacist­s combated attempts to illegally obtain drugs by working in conjunctio­n with the prescriber to minimise the risk.

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 ?? ?? Detective Senior Sergeant Phil Watts, of the Northern Major and Organised Crime Squad; and (inset), Louise Kneeshaw at Townsville Correction­al Centre. Pictures: Matt Taylor.
Detective Senior Sergeant Phil Watts, of the Northern Major and Organised Crime Squad; and (inset), Louise Kneeshaw at Townsville Correction­al Centre. Pictures: Matt Taylor.
 ?? ?? Suboxone strips are easy to conceal and strips hard to detect.
Suboxone strips are easy to conceal and strips hard to detect.

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