Santa Fe New Mexican

N.Y. limits packages to inmates

State curtails families’ ability to send outside items in effort to keep drugs out of prisons

- By Maysoon Khan

ALBANY, N.Y. — As part of an effort to keep illegal drugs and other contraband out of state prisons, New York is taking away one of the few pleasures of life behind bars: It will no longer let people send inmates care packages from home.

Under the new policy, which the state began phasing in last month, friends and family aren’t allowed to deliver packages in person during prison visits. They also won’t be allowed to mail boxes of goodies unless those come directly from thirdparty vendors.

While the rule won’t stop prisoners from getting items that can be ordered online, like a Snickers bar or a bag of Doritos, they will lose access to foods like home-cooked meals or grandma’s cookies.

That’s a letdown for people like Caroline Hansen, who for 10 years hand-delivered packages filled with fresh vegetables, fruits and meats to her husband, who is serving a life sentence.

“When I first started bringing him packages, he said he loved avocados. He hadn’t had them in about 20 years,” said Hansen, a single mother of two who works as a waitress in Long Island.

“What breaks my heart is, I take for granted having a banana with my yogurt. Imagine never being able to eat a banana?” she added, saying her husband’s prison cafeteria serves bananas once a month, at most.

New York had been one of the few states in the nation that still allowed families to send packages to inmates from home. The rule is already in effect in a majority of state prisons.

Starting this month, the state prison system is also testing a program where inmates will be blocked from getting most letters sent on paper. Instead, incoming letters will be scanned by computer, and prisoners will get copies.

The change is being made to try and head off a trend of people soaking letters in drugs to smuggle them past authoritie­s. Multiple states including Ohio, Wisconsin, Michigan, Nebraska and Pennsylvan­ia, already photocopy incoming mail to prevent drugs from being delivered to inmates. The federal Bureau of Prisons began a similar practice in 2019.

New York’s Department of Correction­s and Community Supervisio­n said in a statement that the two new policies are necessary to stop contraband.

Contraband has been smuggled into prisons in a number of ways: books laced with heroin, weapons and unauthoriz­ed electronic­s like phones hidden in packages, and letter mail soaked in drugs like methamphet­amine or a synthetic cannabinoi­d, also known as K2.

When packages are received by a prison, officers remove the items from the box to inspect the items visually or through an X-ray machine. If there is reason for suspicion, officers are allowed to open sealed packages for further inspection.

Those checks, though, aren’t perfect, and authoritie­s believe items slip through.

Critics of the package ban questioned its effectiven­ess, noting prohibited items are sometimes brought in by corrupt prison staff.

Prisoner advocates and families of inmates say the package policy is too restrictiv­e — and an added financial burden.

Wanda Bertram, a communicat­ions strategist at the Prison Policy Initiative, called prison food a “nutritiona­l nightmare” and said some incarcerat­ed people rely on care packages to keep a healthy diet.

Relatives of inmates often rely on private vendors like Walkenhors­t and Jack L. Marcus Company, which specialize in sending allowed goods to prisoners, but items bought from third-party vendors can be more expensive.

Before his release from Sing Sing Correction­al Facility in New York, former prisoner Wilfredo Laracuente said he was able to order a 35-pound package for himself containing packaged cakes, cookies, chips, soaps, shampoo and some toiletries.

It cost $230 — the kind of money most prisoners don’t have.

“This is going to be the beginning of the end, where they stop everything under the guise of security and contraband,” said Laracuente, who served two decades in prison for murder and now facilitate­s workshops that help recently released inmates reintegrat­e into society. “What they’re doing is removing the human component that’s very vital and necessary for the reentry process.”

Even before the ban, families often complained that sending packages was unreliable.

Angelica Watson, whose husband and brother are both incarcerat­ed, said she tried to send packages to them monthly, but food items didn’t always make it through before they spoiled.

“Most of it was nonperisha­ble items,” said Watson, who lives in Buffalo. “I tried to do fresh, but it wasn’t a good idea because they’d hold it in their storage rooms and it would go bad.”

Hansen, whose husband is serving time for killing a cab driver, said having to order goods through vendors that charge “ridiculous prices,” was no solution to the contraband problem.

“My husband basically thinks this is one more way to deprive him of his basic necessitie­s,” Hansen said.

 ?? JULIA NIKHINSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Caroline Hansen, right, participat­es in a rally and vigil last week for Val Gaiter, the longest serving woman in the New York state prison system. Hansen used to hand-deliver two packages containing fresh food a month to her husband in prison but now has to send items she orders through a third-party vendor.
JULIA NIKHINSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Caroline Hansen, right, participat­es in a rally and vigil last week for Val Gaiter, the longest serving woman in the New York state prison system. Hansen used to hand-deliver two packages containing fresh food a month to her husband in prison but now has to send items she orders through a third-party vendor.

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