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Britain's jails are being overrun by drugs: Prison watchdog warns of 'uncontrollable levels of criminality' behind bars as inmates spend 22 hours a day in cells 'high and watching daytime TV'

Britain's jails are being overrun by drugs: Prison watchdog warns of 'uncontrollable levels of criminality' behind bars as inmates spend 22 hours a day in cells 'high and watching daytime TV'

Daily Mail​08-07-2025
Prisons are grappling with 'uncontrollable levels of criminality' due to the surge of drugs being brought in via drones, a watchdog chief has warned.
Chief inspector of prisons Charlie Taylor said inmates were able to order from a 'menu' of illicit substances while sitting in their cells for 22 hours a day 'high and watching daytime TV'.
He described packages containing up to 10kg of drugs being dropped into prisons by drones alongside 'frightening' blades including a zombie knife.
Mr Taylor previously warned that drones dropping drugs at high-security jails HMP Manchester and HMP Long Lartin was a 'threat to national security', and he repeated calls for the threat to be taken seriously 'at the highest levels of Government'.
Unveiling his annual report into prisons yesterday, he said there was a 'theoretical' risk of a drone being used to carry an inmate over a wall as part of an escape.
The watchdog chief said: 'There is a level of risk that's posed by drones that I think is different from what we've seen in the past, and both with stuff coming in and ultimately the potential for something even more serious to happen.
'What I'd like to see is that the prison service really get a grip of this issue and and we'd like to see the Government, security services coming together, using technology, using intelligence, so that this risk doesn't materialise.'
The annual report highlighted concerns that criminal gangs are often using sophisticated drones to target jails and sell contraband to bored and vulnerable inmates.
Mr Taylor said that drones can smuggle in contraband more quickly and accurately than through corrupt prison staff or visits, as they can use location app what3words to deliver 'directly to an individual cell'.
The report detailed that 39 per cent of respondents to prisoner surveys said it was easy to get drugs in prison, and inspectors regularly visited prisons where the recorded rate of positive random drug tests was more than 30 per cent.
It said in many jails there were 'seemingly uncontrollable levels of criminality' that often inexperienced staff were unable to contain.
It also found it 'unsurprising' that national rates of violence increased last year, making the chance of rehabilitation unlikely.
Last month, the Independent Monitoring Board's annual report on prisons found violence remained 'excessively high', which was driven by overcrowding, inadequate mental health support and a surge in drug use.
Of weapons, Mr Taylor said: 'I have been in prisons where they showed inspectors some pretty frightening-looking knives that have got in, which they suspect have got in as a result of drones.'
The discovery of the zombie knife was after the period covered in the annual report.
The watchdog boss said in the report: 'This is a threat that needs to be taken seriously at the highest levels of Government.
'Only when drugs are kept out, and prisoners are involved in genuinely purposeful activity that will help them to get work and resettle successfully on release, can we expect to see prisons rehabilitate rather than just contain the men and women they hold.'
Mr Taylor's report also found overcrowding and lack of activity caused frustration among prisoners which fuelled the demand for drugs, with many spending most of the day in cramped shared cells with broken furniture and vermin.
Overcrowding also meant there were not enough places for every prisoner to take part in work or education while in custody, but even when there were spaces available inspectors found underused workshops because of staff shortages.
Purposeful activity was the worst performing assessment category by inspectors, with 28 out of 38 adult prisons visited deemed to be 'poor' or 'not sufficiently good' in this area.
The findings, reviewed from April 2024 to March 2025, come as ministers grapple with overcrowding and high-profile security incidents in jails.
The Government approved the use of protective body armour for prison staff in high security areas after four prison officers were attacked with hot oil and homemade weapons by Manchester Arena bomb plotter Hashem Abedi at HMP Frankland in April.
Ministers have also vowed to create 14,000 new prison places by 2031 and have accepted recommendations from the independent sentencing review to curb overcrowding in the long term.
Responding to the prison watchdog's annual report, Andrea Coomber KC, chief executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, said: 'This report is a checklist for all the reasons the Government must prioritise reducing prison numbers, urgently.
'Sentencing reform is essential, and sensible steps to reduce the prison population would save lives, protect staff, and help more people to move on from crime.'
Pia Sinha, chief executive of the Prison Reform Trust, also said the report paints a sadly familiar picture of a prison system in deep crisis, which is not just a prison problem but a 'public safety issue'.
'Prisons should be places of rehabilitation, not warehouses of despair,' she said.
Responding to the report, prisons minister Lord James Timpson said ministers are improving prisons so they 'cut crime, not create better criminals'.
'This report shows the scale of the crisis we inherited and the unacceptable pressures faced by our hardworking staff - with prisons dangerously full, rife with drugs and violence,' he said.
'We're also investing £40 million to bolster security, alongside stepping up cooperation with police to combat drones and stop the contraband which fuels violence behind bars'.
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