Los Angeles Times

O.C. sheriff cracks down on drugs in jails

New mail restrictio­ns come after a rise in traffickin­g, including meth-soaked letters.

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

surge in drug smuggling and traffickin­g inside Orange County’s jails has led the Sheriff’s Department to crack down on inmate mail after meth soaked letters and other contraband were found creeping into the facilities.

The Orange County Sheriff ’s Department posted Monday on Facebook that certain types of inmate mail will now be prohibited. Jailers did not specify what letters would be banned, but said the mailroom is a common avenue for inmates to receive narcotics and other contraband. So far this year, 147 greeting cards containing drugs — most soaked in meth — have been found, authoritie­s said.

The change is meant to decrease drug traffickin­g, which the Sheriff’s Department said in a news release has ballooned since 2011 when legislator­s passed Assembly Bill 109. That law shifted the responsibi­lity of lower-level felons from state prisons to county sheriff’s and probation department­s.

A body scanner similar to those used at airports also has been added to the jails’ intake and release center, sheriff’s officials said. Inmates sometimes try to conceal narcotics “on or in their person,” authoritie­s say, so they will be searched when booked into a jail and after attending court, as well as randomly in their cells.

Drug-sniffing canines also will conduct searches of the mailroom for contra A band, according to the news release.

Sheriff’s officials could not immediatel­y be reached Tuesday for comment about the changes but said in the Facebook post that crime and drug smuggling inside the jails have increased since the passage of AB 109. From 2012 to 2017, an average of 64.5 inmate-on-staff assaults occurred each year, compared with an average of 26.8 from 2007 to 2011, according to the news release. And from 2012 to 2017, officials documented an average of 468 drug seizures a year, compared with 57 on average from 2008 to 2011, the release said.

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