Drugs remain a prison problem

By Emily Pearce

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

 

A YEAR after Camp Hill was said to be 'awash with drugs’, their use at HMP Isle of Wight remains a problem, according to a report out today (Tuesday).

The report follows an inspection of the prison  made up of Camp Hill, Parkhurst and Albany — carried out earlier this year.

Inspectors found relatively high levels of illicit drugs remained available at Camp Hill, while the bullying of prisoners for prescribed medication was a problem across all three sites.

They found HMP Isle of Wight was generally a respectful institution and mental health services and provision for older and disabled prisoners were good.

But there were concerns about the victimisation of sex offenders by other prisoners, the high use of segregation and inadequate arrangements for prisoners on their release.

In the six months prior to the inspection, 101 alleged bullying incidents were recorded at Parkhurst, 132 at Albany and 199 at Camp Hill.

Around half of prisoners at Parkhurst and Albany, and more than a third of those at Camp Hill, told inspectors they had felt unsafe.

Black and minority ethnic prisoners were particularly negative about their treatment.

Albany was the safest site inspected, although inspectors said the automated 'night sanitation' toilets were unacceptable and recommended all prisoners should have 24 hour access to toilet facilities.

At Camp Hill, nearly 80 prisoners were recorded as unemployed — deemed by inspectors to be unacceptable in a training prison.

HM chief inspector of prisons Nick Hardwick said: "Our overall findings at HMP Isle of Wight are mixed. Our healthy prison tests show continued and significant variation between the sites: there is some improvement at Albany, some deterioration at Parkhurst and little change at Camp Hill.

"As we indicated last time, these variations are the best evidence of the challenge in making these disparate establishments a coherent whole.

"We were shown specific and particular plans to advance the project, but we are aware of scepticism among both staff and prisoners about the future."

Chief executive of the National Offender Management Service Michael Spurr said: "I am pleased the chief inspector has recognised progress is being made at HMP Isle of Wight.

"The creation of a single prison has already delivered significant savings for the taxpayer, and the governor and his team are developing effective regimes to meet prisoner needs across all three sites.

"We are committed to managing prisoners safely, and the governor and his staff will continue to work with the available resources to build on the integration process already underway and address concerns raised in the report."

Reporter: emilyp@iwcpmail.co.uk

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by Steve Laser

16th October 2012, at 16:31:43

AK Smith, I would be very happy to use more of the Tax I pay now, to provide a prison that is actually doing what it’s meant to, that is, provide a secure, and dry cell that the scum of the earth serve the punishment that was handed out to them by our Courts. I am talking about criminals that have in many cases ruined other descent peoples lives and the punishment and that’s what it should be, punishment is loosing their freedom and rights to a “normal life”. If drugs make it easier to do time then we must stop the drug trafficking as I don’t want prison to be a blur I want it to hurt so they don’t want to return.
If more money is needed to build these super prisons then we must find it and cut back on some of the hand-outs we give to those in the UK and overseas.

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by Jackie Hunt

16th October 2012, at 15:10:10

…place!

Not entirely sure you are disagreeing with the majority here Miss A K Smith so that’s not meant as a verbal attack on you – I just think articles highlighting issues like this; certainly don’t seem like a deterrent to go to prison for me and tends to ruffle mosts feathers. :-)

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by Jackie Hunt

16th October 2012, at 15:08:43

AKSmith,surely if cuts in staff at prisons have been affected so badly that prisons are now quite clearly out of control&if problems with drugs as in this example are so bad,why are we still allowing such rights as visiting hours&these medications queues you talk of,which clearly play a role in this problem?I do(vaguely)understand, human right laws of some kind play a massive significance in keeping privileges(&that is how I see a prisoner being visited by his family as,a privilege)but really,where was the‘humans right act’in force when Prisoner A was molesting a 5 year old or Prisoner B bashing an innocent man’s body to death…Purse strings are being clenched that bit tighter in all walks of life&if money,or rather lack of,is the root cause of this problem,then changes have to be made somewhere to ensure prisons are a place people should NOT want to end up in. Surely,for one of the places for it to be ‘ok’ to lose some rights,prisons & their prisoners should be the

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by AK Smith

16th October 2012, at 14:18:28

Mr Walker I am none of the suggested and am female, I do not advocate the fact that prisoners get an easy life in fact the polar opposite, I was merely commenting on the fact that as usual comments get posted expressing concerns over the state of society, job cuts, rising taxes etc. But who jumped up and down when Prison Officers jobs were cut, dog handlers let go, budgets cut etc. then people wonder how drugs get in!

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by david walker

16th October 2012, at 14:11:25

p i l l o ck is not a swear word c.p.

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by david walker

16th October 2012, at 14:10:26

either mr smith is an inmate, prison officer or ****. Chain gangs might be the answer that would raise funds. why should the public (many of them victims) cough up any more money to keep the scum of the earth in the lap of tax free luxury. They have a much better life inside than the homeless in this country. And some not homeless!

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by AK Smith

16th October 2012, at 13:01:30

Interesting points made by those commenting here, would you be prepared to increase you tax contributions to cover the costs of drugs dogs and officers being brought back into use and futher officer to patrol the grounds - officers are working to skeleton staff barely enough to cover the wings let alone patrol the external grounds, have huge on snumbers to watch the visits halls and medication queues.

If you feel so strongly make a donation, write to NOMS for extra monies, draw up a gang and patrol the grounds yourself. CUTS in funding has hit everyone including the Prison Service.

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by Lee Majors

16th October 2012, at 09:51:34

"although inspectors said the automated 'night sanitation' toilets were unacceptable and recommended all prisoners should have 24 hour access to toilet facilities"
WHY?
They are in prison because they could not give a sh#t about living a normal life in society!
They should be paying board and lodgings during their stay at Her Majesty's pleasure!
They should have ONE TV in a main room which can be watched between 6-9pm only. Rest of the day can be for working a treadmill to power electric, no work, no food, simple, then lights out & lockdown at 9.15pm.
How do drugs get into the prison? Stiffer penalties for those that smuggle them in! Random dope tests are needed on inmates, anyone showing positive, means solitary confinement for the rest of their sentence. We are too softly softly incase we get sued for taking someones rights away in jail, but they did not worry about that when they committed the crime.
Stuff 'em.

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by Steve Laser

16th October 2012, at 09:02:10

I find it incredible that a Prison has "a drug problem" . The Prison security must be poor if its possible to bring in drugs from outside or is it a blind eye is turned as it keeps our poor criminals happy, so less problems.
If its the prison drugs that are being misused then put a better system in place, I think the majority of the general public cant see why this is not dealt with in days not years.

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by david walker

16th October 2012, at 08:31:57

get an butlins manager to run it. Poor criminals need love and understanding. And more xboxes and a decent sky package might help with their extended break from the rigours of the real world. And so what if they are bullied, Wot did they do to be in the prison in the first place?All crime has victims.

Any views or opinions presented in the comments above are solely those of the author and do not represent those of the Isle of Wight County Press.

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