Beefed-up security at prison gates intercepts 20,000 drug-smuggling plots

X-ray scanners and biometric identification have been rolled out in jails in England and Wales under Government plans to tackle drugs.
Tougher airport-style security rolled out across prisons in England and Wales has intercepted nearly 20,000 attempts to smuggle illegal items behind bars (Jon Super/PA)
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Sophie Wingate14 May 2022

Airport-style security including X-ray body scanners installed in prisons over the past two years have foiled nearly 20,000 attempts to smuggle drugs and weapons behind bars, the Ministry of Justice has said.

Biometric identification for visitors and drug-trace machines are also preventing dangerous items from passing through prison gates under Government plans to cut crime in jails in England and Wales.

Justice Secretary Dominic Raab said: “With this innovative new technology, we are enforcing our zero tolerance approach to drugs, knives and mobile phones in prisons.

An X-ray body scan of a phone during an attempt to smuggle contraband behind bars (MoJ Handout/PA)
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“Illicit contraband endangers our hard-working staff and thwarts the efforts of other prisoners who are serious about their rehabilitation.

“Alongside abstinence-based drug treatment, getting more prisoners than ever into work and improving facilities to maintain family ties, our strategy will make our streets safer and protect the public.”

More than 70 state-of-the-art X-ray scanners have been installed in closed male prisons, flagging up concealed contraband including one haul of 81 rocks of crack cocaine.

Since the start of this year, 42 of the most challenging prisons have also been equipped with machines that can detect microscopic traces of new psychoactive substances – formerly known as legal highs – on mail and clothes.

Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary Dominic Raab with a prison officer at the opening of HMP Five Wells in Wellingborough in March (Joe Giddens/PA)
PA Wire

There are also new metal detection archways, hand-held scanners and extra drug dogs at the gates of these institutions, with visitors subject to biometric identification.

The Government unveiled a 10-year drugs strategy in December in an attempt to end the cycle of addiction and repeat offending, including a £100 million investment in security technology for jails.

The proposals, put forward in a White Paper, pledged airport-style security being installed in all newly-built prisons and set new targets for prison governors to root out drugs and rehabilitate inmates.

Abstinence therapy was among a range of treatments promised to help offenders with addictions, while those leaving custody were to have access to a new education service to assist them in finding work.

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