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Saturday, September 21, 2024

HB seeks to stop illegal objects from going to jail facilities

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Surigao del Norte Rep. Robert Ace Barbers said Congress needs to enact a measure that calls to end the proliferation of prohibited objects inside penal, custodial, and detention facilities.

Barbers, chair of the House Committee on Dangerous Drugs, said: “The bill is necessary for our government agencies to impose the appropriate penalties for persons and syndicates who continue to commit illegal activities inside correctional, detention, and custodial facilities, especially convicted drug lords and hardened criminals who use these facilities as their own protected kingdom for criminal activities even while incarcerated.”

Barbers, one of the principal authors of House Bill (HB)  9153, seeks to implement the Contraband Detection and Control System (CDCS) where penalties will be provided for possessing, introducing, aiding, or abetting the entry of contraband.

The legislator made the push for the bill’s passage after the House in plenary session approved the bill’s second reading late this week.

The bill defines “contraband”  as any object that is prohibited by law to be obtained or possessed inside correctional, custodial, and detention facilities.

These include illegal drugs, firearms, explosives, alcohol or intoxicating beverages, cigarettes, tobacco products, vapes, all forms of currency and monetary instruments, electronic communication devices, and luxury items such as appliances, gambling or gaming equipment, and jewelry.

The bill states any item that is capable of threatening the safety, security, or health of persons in the correctional institution, or any item that can be used for planning, aiding, or executing the escape from such facilities is considered contraband as well.

“HB No. 9153 principally aims to prevent the proliferation of contraband in prison by mandating all government agencies and local government units that operate and maintain any correctional, custodial or detention facility to establish and implement a [CDCS],” he noted.

Under the bill, the CDCS will cover all facilities that detain or hold persons deprived of liberty (PDL).

It will be implemented through the use of handled and walk-through metal detectors, X-ray scanners, K-9 units, and other modern technology and devices.

“Any person who shall introduce, convey, or attempt to introduce dangerous drugs, firearms, and explosives will face imprisonment ranging from 20 years and one day to 40 years and a fine of not less than P5 million but not more than P10 million,” the bill noted.

For other kinds of contraband, the bill states the penalty of imprisonment ranges from six years and one day to 12 years and a fine of not less than P1 million but not more than P5 million.

The bills provides that aside from penalties of fine and imprisonment, any public official, jail authority and employee in violation will also be penalized with perpetual absolute disqualification from holding public office and forfeiture of all retirement benefits and accrued leave credits.

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