The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Barlinnie is like no other prison

Presenter reveals reporting from world’s

- By Bill Gibb BGIBB@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Ross Kemp has been to some of the most dangerous places on earth.

The actor has boldly gone where most would fear to tread, from detailing devastatio­n in the war zones of Afghanista­n and Syria to confrontin­g gun- toting gangsters in Las Vegas and New Orleans.

However, Kemp admits that going behind the bars of Scotland’s Barlinnie prison was something special.

He filmed in the Glasgow jail as part of ITV’s Crime and Punishment season.

Kemp said: “I’ve been to Afghanista­n a number of times and last year I was in Libya, Syria and Iraq and this wasn’t like going into a prison in El Salvador or Venezuela.

“So I have been to lots of scary places. But there is an edge to Barlinnie.

“It has a reputation for a reason and Glasgow is a tough town with some tough people in it. I like the city’s reputation, but I had to do a self defence course before I went in.

“There’ s always a propensity for violence in prisons as a lot of inmates don’t consider the results of their actions.”

To get a flavour of life as an inmate, Ross was put through a prisoner’ s admission process on arrival at the jail.

“I was handcuffed, had my photograph taken and was asked about my mental health.

“I then had to strip naked below the waist to make sure I didn’t have anything secreted.

“Standing there with someone wearing a uniform looking at you is humiliatin­g.”

Despite the prison’s reputation, Ross says he was, on the whole, warmly welcomed.

He got used to being called Grant after his EastEnders character and when banter turned to abuse, other inmates stepped in.

“At one stage someone was screaming at me when I was in the exercise yard. Then a guy who clearly had some clout told him in so uncertain terms to be quiet as I was only doing my job.”

His programme – screened at on ITV at 9pm on Thursday – investigat­es how drugs and mobile phones are smuggled into jails, from being concealed in body cavities to being thrown over the walls.

The drug problem at Barlinnie, is so bad, prisoners get through 100 litres of methadone a week, making it Europe’s largest dispenser of the heroin substitute.

Drugs are also smuggled inside the jail in increasing­ly ingenious ways. Children’s paintings, supposedly taken in to cheer up inmates, had been found to have Valium in the blue skies.

And now-illegal highs were sprayed on love letters sent in to inmates who then cut them up and sold them to other prisoners to smoke.

He said: “I was told dog ball- throwers were used. If you see someone practicing with one on a field with no dog around, they’re only doing it for one reason.

“The drugs go for five times what they do on the street, so some people go to prison on purpose, smuggling in, to make money.”

Ross, best known in recent years for his Extreme World documentar­ies for Sky, also discovered the ever- present sense of violence

Violence in British prisons hit record levels in 2016 with more than 7000 assaults on staff and over 20,000 prisoner- onprisoner attacks.

In 1987, Barlinnie, known as the Bar-L, was the scene of major rioting which inmates claimed was sparked by prison officer brutality. Ross says times have changed. “Gone are the days when prison officers

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 ??  ?? Ross with his wife, Renee
Ross with his wife, Renee

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