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Saturday, May 17, 2025

Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­is­ter tells of ‘jail­house econ­o­my’

Big businesses operating inside prison

by

829 days ago
20230208
A prison officer on  duty at Carerra Prison.

A prison officer on duty at Carerra Prison.

ROBERTO CODALLO

Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­is­ter Fitzger­ald Hinds yes­ter­day re­vealed the ex­tent of the “jail­house econ­o­my” with­in the prison sys­tem. He said most of the in­mates charged with mur­der are known gang mem­bers who have “se­ri­ous in­flu­ence” in their re­spec­tive com­mu­ni­ties and in some cas­es across the coun­try.

He said prison of­fi­cers are seen as op­pres­sors.

“It’s not a tea par­ty in there. The peo­ple in there are al­leged to have com­mit­ted nasty crimes and have no re­gard for hu­mans, law, moth­er, fa­ther... they rude!”

He said the “jail­house econ­o­my” in­volves hun­dreds of thou­sands of dol­lars.

“Big busi­ness­es are run from in­side the jail through their friends and il­le­gal com­mu­ni­ca­tions. It’s an on­go­ing bat­tle to deal with il­le­gal com­mu­ni­ca­tions, some of which have to do with call­ing of shots on the out­side, get this one dead, or get that one dead,” he told the Sen­ate

As a re­sult, there are vic­tims on the out­side, busi­ness­men against whom ex­tor­tion is ex­ert­ed and funds en­ter a bank ac­count. He said when some pris­on­ers get out of jail, there are cars, busi­ness­es, prop­er­ty and mon­ey and more in­flu­ence “and the beast is get­ting big­ger and fat­ter.”

He said 16 prison of­fi­cers had been mur­dered in the last ten years, al­leged­ly due to “hits” or­dered from be­hind prison walls. Be­tween Jan­u­ary 2021 and De­cem­ber 2022 some 88 prison of­fi­cers re­port­ed be­ing threat­ened by in­mates.

Hinds said the strug­gle to deal with il­le­gal com­mu­ni­ca­tion con­tin­ues and tech­nol­o­gy and oth­er ef­forts in­vest­ed in this ef­fort had “lim­it­ed, but let me say some mea­sure of im­pact.”

“I give you the as­sur­ance the state at the mo­ment is con­tin­u­ing its ef­forts to en­sure the il­le­gal com­mu­ni­ca­tions are a thing of the past. We con­tin­ue that strug­gle,” he said.

There is al­so the is­sue of some prison of­fi­cers who are “weak­ly, shame­ful­ly” al­low­ing them­selves to be­come mules ei­ther out of fear or com­plic­i­ty as the jail­house econ­o­my “gen­er­ates plen­ty, plen­ty plen­ty mon­ey,” Hinds said.

“A cig­a­rette sells for $100, a phone call al­so. Many moth­ers, girl­friends and aunts out­side the prison spend a lot, a lot, of mon­ey. One moth­er said her son al­ways wants $1,000 on a phone card or for the cafe­te­ria, but she found it was be­ing used for oth­er rea­sons.”

CrimeBusiness PrisonFitzgerald HindsInstagram


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