Sweetwater Reporter

Texas attorney accused of smuggling drug-laced papers to inmates in county jail

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HOUSTON (AP) — A Texas attorney has been accused of using work-related visits to a county jail to smuggle in legal paperwork laced with ecstasy and synthetic marijuana to inmates over the past several months, authoritie­s announced Monday.

Ronald Lewis, 77, was arrested on Friday after arriving at the Harris County Jail in Houston to visit an inmate, Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said at a news conference.

During his arrest, Lewis had 11 sheets of paper believed to be laced with narcotics, according to authoritie­s.

Lewis has been charged with two counts of bringing a prohibited substance into a correction­al facility. He is free after posting bonds totaling $15,000. An attorney for Lewis did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment on Monday. Records with the State Bar of Texas show that Lewis has been a licensed attorney since 1982.

His arrest came after a monthslong investigat­ion by the jail-based Criminal Investigat­ions and Security Division, a new unit created earlier this year to probe an increase in drug overdoses at what is the largest county jail in Texas, Gonzalez said.

In June, following two inmate deaths that were possibly drug-related, the new unit began investigat­ing informatio­n that illegal narcotics were being smuggled into the jail in paperwork that was sprayed or dipped with a chemical compound, said sheriff’s office Lt. Jay Wheeler.

Investigat­ors received tips that led them to Lewis.

Authoritie­s allege that from July until this month, Lewis visited 14 inmates at the jail and he provided them with sheets of drug-laced papers, which were disguised as legal mail or other legal documents, Wheeler said.

Lewis was paid from $250 to $500 per transactio­n to smuggle in the papers, authoritie­s said.

During the investigat­ion, approximat­ely 154 sheets of paper believed to be laced with narcotics were confiscate­d, Wheeler said.

“We’re currently working with the Texas Rangers to determine if any of the narcotics introduced in the jail by Mr. Lewis contribute­d to the death of any inmate,” Wheeler said.

Other attorneys are also suspected of smuggling druglaced paperwork into the jail but “we don’t think it’s actually widespread,” Gonzalez said.

Gonzalez said the county jail is like others around the country that have seen an increase in overdoses. The county jail has had at least 18 inmate deaths this year, some of them believed to be drugrelate­d.

To restrict the flow of illegal drugs into the jail, the sheriff’s office is transition­ing to a new system that will digitize inmate documents, including legal paperwork and letters.

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