News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Ruling Reveals Drug Problem Behind Bars |
Title: | New Zealand: Ruling Reveals Drug Problem Behind Bars |
Published On: | 2003-09-09 |
Source: | New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 14:18:04 |
RULING REVEALS DRUG PROBLEM BEHIND BARS
Signs of a significant drug problem at Rimutaka prison in Upper Hutt
have been used to back up a decision to pull a drug-using inmate out
of a computer course.
The prisoner, Anthony Brian Newton, had to be back at the course this
week if he was to have a realistic chance of passing his remaining
exams and getting a diploma. His family had paid the fees of $6500.
He had asked a High Court judge to review the decision to revoke his
temporary release.
But Justice John Wild's ruling, issued last Friday, said submissions
from the prison superintendent and the Corrections Department pointed
to a significant drug problem at Rimutaka. The prison was concerned
about drug use making prisoners violent or unpredictable.
There was a risk that the public would lose confidence in a penal
system that could not contain drug use within prisons.
A June 17 search of the unit in which Newton was housed found a
syringe, methamphetamine and cannabis. Ten cells showed signs of drug
use, including Newton's.
His permission to attend the Lower Hutt computer course was revoked
after two random urine tests were positive for methamphetamine.
Newton's basis for his High Court action was that he had not been
given a chance to challenge the test results.
Justice Wild upheld the prison and Corrections Department
decisions.
He said Newton pointed to the course as part of his rehabilitation,
but the judge asked what the chances were of a successful computer
career if Newton continued to use Class A drugs while in prison.
Newton was deported from Australia in 1995 after an 11-year jail term
there for drug offences.
Two years later, he was back in prison in New Zealand for importing
and supplying class A drugs.
He is due to be freed in February.
Signs of a significant drug problem at Rimutaka prison in Upper Hutt
have been used to back up a decision to pull a drug-using inmate out
of a computer course.
The prisoner, Anthony Brian Newton, had to be back at the course this
week if he was to have a realistic chance of passing his remaining
exams and getting a diploma. His family had paid the fees of $6500.
He had asked a High Court judge to review the decision to revoke his
temporary release.
But Justice John Wild's ruling, issued last Friday, said submissions
from the prison superintendent and the Corrections Department pointed
to a significant drug problem at Rimutaka. The prison was concerned
about drug use making prisoners violent or unpredictable.
There was a risk that the public would lose confidence in a penal
system that could not contain drug use within prisons.
A June 17 search of the unit in which Newton was housed found a
syringe, methamphetamine and cannabis. Ten cells showed signs of drug
use, including Newton's.
His permission to attend the Lower Hutt computer course was revoked
after two random urine tests were positive for methamphetamine.
Newton's basis for his High Court action was that he had not been
given a chance to challenge the test results.
Justice Wild upheld the prison and Corrections Department
decisions.
He said Newton pointed to the course as part of his rehabilitation,
but the judge asked what the chances were of a successful computer
career if Newton continued to use Class A drugs while in prison.
Newton was deported from Australia in 1995 after an 11-year jail term
there for drug offences.
Two years later, he was back in prison in New Zealand for importing
and supplying class A drugs.
He is due to be freed in February.
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