Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Prisons say changes after guards fell ill have cut smuggling

- By Mark Scolforo Associated Press writer Lisa Cornwell in Cincinnati contribute­d to this report.

CAMP HILL, PA. >> Major changes in mail and visiting polices at Pennsylvan­ia prisons have sharply cut the number of correction­s officers and employees seeking help for suspected exposure to synthetic marijuana, prison officials say.

The Correction­s Department says cases of suspected staff exposure have plummeted since Sept. 6, when new policies were announced. There had been more than 50 instances in the prior month, but only eight since the start of September. Officials said all have been cleared to return to work.

Drug overdoses among prisoners have fallen, and investigat­ors believe illicit drugs have become scarcer inside the system, where synthetic marijuana and Suboxone and its generic equivalent­s are by far the most common problem.

“Prices have increased pretty dramatical­ly,” said Maj. William Nicklow, head of the Correction­s Department’s investigat­ions and intelligen­ce bureau. “They’ve doubled and tripled in some cases.”

There has also been a recent spike in the number of visitors caught trying to smuggle in drugs, which Nicklow said “is a direct result of us cutting off the mail avenue.”

In Ohio, where nearly 30 people were treated for exposure to a heroin and fentanyl mixture, authoritie­s have also been taking measures to stem employee exposure to contraband drugs but correction officers are demanding they do more.

Synthetic marijuana, technicall­y synthetic cannabinoi­ds and also called K2, refers to a class of chemicals that trigger responses in the brain receptors that also respond to the active compound in marijuana. Suboxone, a prescripti­on drug that contains opioids and is used to treat opioid withdrawal symptoms, is commonly smuggled in prisons.

“There are fewer incidents,” said Jason Bloom, president of the Pennsylvan­ia State Correction­s Officers Associatio­n, “but it’s still too early to tell if we are actually curtailing the introducti­on of drugs.”

Staff has been increased in Pennsylvan­ia prison visiting rooms, and there is a temporary ban on vending machines and photo booths, which have been linked to drug smuggling.

The prisons have revamped how incoming mail is processed, although the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvan­ia says it is preparing a legal challenge over the new practice for handling mail from lawyers.

Prison workers now open legal mail in the inmate recipient’s presence, copy it and give the inmate a photocopy. The prison system keeps the original secured for 45 days before destroying it.

ACLU lawyer Vic Walczak said his organizati­on, which gets about 800 complaints annually from Pennsylvan­ia state prisoners, has determined it can no longer assume legal mail remains confidenti­al. He said the new process compromise­s attorney-client privilege.

“That document could be in some envelope in some bin, accessible to unknown people, and that simply is not a risk we can take,” Walczak said.

All non-legal mail must now be sent to a post office box in St. Petersburg, Florida, where a vendor opens, scans and forwards it by email to the prison where the addressee is housed. At Camp Hill, mail handlers print out up to 4,000 pages each day, including color copies of photos, and convey the printouts to inmates.

In Ohio, talks are going on after the group that represents prison guards demanded that more be done to protect them.

“We are alarmed by the escalation of drug use, especially opioids, inside our prisons and have concerns about the risk they pose to the safety of our staff,” union president Chris Mabe said.

The union’s demands include a temporary lockdown and clearing out of cells to check for contraband at Ross Correction­al Institutio­n in Chillicoth­e, where staff members fell sick while tending to an unconsciou­s inmate in late August.

Ohio authoritie­s say a number of steps are underway or under considerat­ion, including distributi­on of naloxone and protective equipment, training on hazardous drug exposure, and evaluation of procedures for searches, mail, visits and packages.

Pennsylvan­ia prison officials believe smugglers have been soaking the pages of letters and books with synthetic marijuana to evade detection. As a result, Correction­s will no longer allow direct shipment of books to inmates, but instead will purchase pre-paid books for inmates.

The state also has expanded the use of e-readers, which about a third of the inmates have, to allow them to be used for books and magazines. They had previously been restricted to music, games and a form of email. The prison system has also stopped third-party book donations but may resume them in some form. The prison libraries are also expanding what periodical­s they offer; they each typically contain more than 10,000 books.

In the first day alone last week, the Correction­s Department said, inmates downloaded about 1,600 ebooks, which typically cost $3 to $24 apiece.

Prison officials say the new efforts, which also include body scanners, ion scanners and drone detection, are expected to cost more than $9 million this year.

 ?? MARK SCOLFORO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Pennsylvan­ia Correction­s Department mail inspector Brian Strawser sorts inmate mail at Camp Hill state prison in Camp Hill, Pa. Pennsylvan­ia prison officials say new mail handling procedures and other changes appear to have helped address a spate of incidents this year in which correction­al officers and other staff have sought medical treatment believed to be caused by exposure to synthetic marijuana that was smuggled into state prisons.
MARK SCOLFORO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Pennsylvan­ia Correction­s Department mail inspector Brian Strawser sorts inmate mail at Camp Hill state prison in Camp Hill, Pa. Pennsylvan­ia prison officials say new mail handling procedures and other changes appear to have helped address a spate of incidents this year in which correction­al officers and other staff have sought medical treatment believed to be caused by exposure to synthetic marijuana that was smuggled into state prisons.

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