More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Anthony Papa

GET UPDATES FROM Anthony Papa
 

New Charge for Cameron Douglas: Judge Shocked That Drugs Are Available in Prison

Posted: 10/24/11 11:17 AM ET

When you thought it could not get worse for Cameron Douglas, the son of movie star, Michael Douglas -- it does. It was just reported that Cameron, who is serving a five-year sentence for drug dealing, now has pleaded guilty to drug possession while in prison. He took a plea bargain and will be sentenced to an additional year to 18 months in prison. The judge in his case, U.S. District Judge Richard Berman, was puzzled by the lack of security in the prisons. The Associated Press reported that the judge assumed that prison facilities are safe and well-managed when he sends someone to prison. He was under the assumption "that these types of things don't go on." With all due respect to the judge, I say that he is clueless. It's a well-known fact that drugs are easily obtainable in prisons.

You might wonder how I know this. I served a 15 to life sentence for a non-violent drug offense under the Rockefeller Drug Laws of New York State. When I went to Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Ossining, NY, I was shocked to find the availability of almost any type of drug you wanted. It was a simple process. If you had the cash you could get the stash. There was even a prostitution and drug ring run by female officers there. In my book 15 to Life I discuss this in detail in a section titled "Swing Swing."

Some drugs were hidden in packages sent from the outside. Peanut butter, for example, was excellent for smuggling drugs into the prison. The peanut butter would be melted down in a microwave and scooped out to make room for the drugs. It would then be replaced and the jar would be heat-sealed in the microwave. Some people would actually have the container professionally shrink-wrapped before mailing it to the prison to give it a store-bought look. Prisoners' visitors also brought drugs into the prison. They'd transport them in a body cavity. I once knew a guy who smuggled drugs in his baby's diaper -- extracted them in the visiting room bathroom, and then passed them on to a prison mule, who'd clear security easily.

Corrupt guards and civilians who worked in the prison also brought in drugs. Drug dealing was a lucrative way to supplement their low-paying state salaries, and since they weren't subject to intrusive searches like prisoners, they could smuggle in much greater quantities. They didn't have to rely on body cavities to conceal drugs. They'd simply bring them in their handbags or pockets.

For the right price, you could virtually get any type of drug you wanted. Word of mouth usually advertised who had what. The price of drugs varied, but the rule of thumb was four times the drug's street value. A ten-dollar bag of heroin on the street would cost forty dollars or the cash equivalent in cigarettes since currency was not allowed in prison. If you didn't have smuggled-in cash or store-bought smokes, you could make payments through "send-outs," essentially street -to-street transactions.

If you got hooked on drugs, you could count on paying with more than currency or cigarettes. Some guys got in so deep they sold their bodies to get a fix. Whether or not you used drugs on the outside, it was easy to get hooked on the inside. It was said that if you didn't have a habit when you came to Sing Sing, you could easily leave with one. Sing Sing was not special and reflects the reality of drugs and use of drugs in prisons. In Breaking the Taboo, a recently released film by Brazilian film maker, Fernando Grostein Andrade, the failure of the war on drugs on a global scale is documented. And one of the main points throughout the film is the availability of drugs in prisons across the world. I was honored by giving the closing line of the film in which I say "if you can't control drug use in a maximum security prison, how can you control drug use in a free society".

So the Honorable Judge Berman, I ask you to please go easy on Cameron Douglas, who has admitted that he is addicted to drugs, when you sentence him for his additional crime. Cameron did what many drug-addicted prisoners do when they are imprisoned. They seek to get high to escape the living hell they are in, even if it means breaking the law.

 
 
 

Follow Anthony Papa on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AnthonyPapa

 
 
  • Comments
  • 6
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rosey7
09:42 AM on 11/29/2011
Cameron has been in solitary confinement for a month. He has lost the ability to use the phone, have any visitors, including his parents and has only a dull pencil and paper to pass the time. Is this not cruel and unusual punishment for a guy who has not committed a violent crime? I can only assume Cameron started using again when he realized the magnitude of what he was doing when he was testifying against the drug ring leader. Mercy, please, Judge Berman !!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DeniseDuffieldThomas
Coach and Author of Lucky B*tch
12:11 AM on 10/31/2011
I'm so thankful I don't have a drug problem. I wouldn't wish it on anyone.
12:04 PM on 10/27/2011
The four times the street price rule is proof that tighter controls only increase the prices. That kind of profit margin guarantees corruption. It isn't much different than kids getting into dealing because it is easy money for little work. Everyone in the drug game knows the risk, and the truth is that very few people are actually caught.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bessielil
trying to organize hummingbirds
09:15 PM on 10/24/2011
The judge should visit some prisons to understand the environments to which he is sentencing his non-violent offenders. Checking out assumptions would seem to be required of a judge. Bad judgment all around.
10:41 AM on 10/24/2011
What world has this judge been living in? Suprised that drugs are in prison? NOTHING can stop drugs when people want them and are willing to pay for them, it is a market force and guards can make good money brining them in. Inmates with money and connections can get anything they want, and make a fortune reselling it inside.

Prohibitionists just don't get it, do they? No matter what laws they pass, no matter how much they try, drugs WILL make their way in to jails and prisons, and they help keep the peace. If inmates can get a buzz and relax, they get in less trouble, and guards are safer. What suprises me is that there is a judge left that does not realize this..supposedly they are intelligent people, and anyone with a smattering of sense knows that prohibition is a failed and destructive concept that never works..ever.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Anthony Papa
Anthony Papa is an artist, writer activist
01:33 PM on 10/24/2011
CannabisRex - Correct! the Honorable Judge Berman's cluelessness reflects the failure of our criminal justice system!