The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Scientist leads battle against drugs in jail

● Team is using technology to expose smuggling techniques

- BY JAMES WYLLIE

Crime lords attempting to flood the northeast’s super-jail with drugs are being blocked by pioneering technology – and a scientist’s expertise.

Working from a highsecuri­ty laboratory, Craig McKenzie and a team of chemists have been using sophistica­ted methods to expose gangs’ smuggling techniques.

The number of drugs incidents at HMP Grampian has been rising steadily in recent years, in conjunctio­n with an increase in suspicious mail seizures at the Peterhead facility.

Criminals have been caught “impregnati­ng” writing paper with drugs and posting it to inmates. Once inside, it is portioned into small strips and sold to others who can smoke or vape it to feel the effects.

In order to tackle the problem, the Scottish Prison Service has launched a pilot study at Dundee University to develop new ways of identifyin­g illegal substances, with its findings being used to help at facilities across the country.

The Forensic Drug Research group primarily focuses on synthetic cannabinoi­d receptor agonists (SCRAs) – manmade, cannabis-style products often referred to as spice. These were legal and able to be sold in shops until three years ago, when a blanket ban recategori­sed them as class B drugs.

Dr McKenzie, a forensic chemist and senior lecturer, said: “These drugs are normally made in internatio­nal laboratori­es, mainly in China, bought off the web then imported into the UK and made into whatever.

“After the law changed in 2016 and they could no longer be sold in shops, they pretty much disappeare­d from the streets in Scotland.

“But by impregnati­ng them in letters, they see it as a successful way to get into places like prisons.”

But Dr McKenzie has described the efforts to get one step ahead of manufactur­ers as a game of “cat and mouse”.

Unlike the UK, which outlawed all such substances with blanket legislatio­n, Chinese lawmakers are looking at each compound individual­ly.

Dr McKenzie said: “The manufactur­ers make small changes to the chemical structure. They want it to have the same effect but they want to make it legal.”

But Dr McKenzie says their research has allowed them to track certain substances back to the factories they were manufactur­ed in, and learn about which are proving most popular in prisons.

The Dundee University team are analysing trends several months in advance, and are able to make accurate prediction­s about what seizures prison guards will be making in the near future.

“They need informatio­n to understand how to deal with this, and our role is to provide scientific advice on that,” he added.

“These drugs are made in internatio­nal laboratori­es”

 ??  ?? APPLIANCE OF SCIENCE: Dr Craig McKenzie and his team at Dundee University are working to stay one step ahead of the jail drug smugglers
APPLIANCE OF SCIENCE: Dr Craig McKenzie and his team at Dundee University are working to stay one step ahead of the jail drug smugglers
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