The Daily Telegraph

Drug-filled dead rats tossed into prison grounds by smugglers

Extreme attempt to get contraband into jail highlights extent of problem, says minister

- By Charles Hymas HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR

CRIMINALS are using dead rats to smuggle “zombie drug” spice and mobile phones into jail because the prison black market for them is so lucrative.

Three dead rats stuffed with drugs, mobile phones, chargers and SIM cards were found by officers at HMP Guys Marsh in Dorset after being thrown over the prison walls.

The Ministry of Justice believe the extraordin­ary operation – disclosed today – was orchestrat­ed by criminal kingpins through their organised crime networks.

Drugs in jails can fetch 10 times their street price and generate further profits through repayment of debts for loans to buy them.

One prison board member claimed even a single cigarette could cost as much as £100 on the black market.

Criminals have previously used tennis balls and pigeons to smuggle contraband into jails but it is thought that this is the first time rats have been used. They were disembowel­led with their innards replaced by five mobile phones and chargers, three sim cards, cigarette papers and a large quantity of drugs including spice, cannabis and tobacco. They were then neatly stitched up before being thrown over prison walls.

The surge in spice in prisons has been blamed for spiralling violence.

Rory Stewart, the prisons’ minister, said: “This find shows the extraordin­ary lengths to which criminals will go to smuggle drugs into prison, and underlines why our work to improve security is so important. Drugs and mobile phones behind bars put prisoners, prison officers and the public at risk. By toughening security and searching, we can ensure prisons are places of rehabilita­tion that will prevent further reoffendin­g and keep the public safe.”

Prison officials say scanners are key to combating smuggling either through X-ray technology that can spot drugs or phones inside visitors’ bodies or Rapiscan machines which can detect drugs soaked into letters or paper brought into jails.

A prison board chief revealed one prisoner had tried to smuggle in drugs to Durham prison by soaking their hair in spice so it could be cut and smoked.

One in five (20.4 per cent) random mandatory drug tests are now positive, half of which were accounted for by spice, according to the latest Ministry of

Justice (MOJ) figures. This is the highest level since 2006.

Assaults and violence in prisons are also at record highs.

Assaults on staff were up by nearly a third (29 per cent) to more than 10,000 last year, while prisoner-on-prisoner attacks rose by 18 per cent to more than 24,000.

At some prisons, like Durham, two thirds of inmates say drugs are easily accessible.

“In order to tackle drugs we need technology,” said Chris Hutchinson, a board member at Durham prison.

“There’s still a high level of people secreting packages in their bodies.” The MOJ aims to introduce X-ray and drug scanners throughout prisons in England and Wales after successful trials of the technology.

Some £7 million has been earmarked for new security measures including scanners, improved searching techniques, phone-blocking technology and a financial crime unit to target the criminal kingpins operating in prisons.

‘This find shows the extraordin­ary lengths to which criminals will go to smuggle drugs into prison’

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 ??  ?? Ministry of Justice officials found drugs including spice and cannabis inside the bodies of dead rats
Ministry of Justice officials found drugs including spice and cannabis inside the bodies of dead rats
 ??  ?? The rats were disembowel­led and sewn up
The rats were disembowel­led and sewn up
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