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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Lucinda Cameron & Naomi Corrigan

Prison officer who smuggled class A drugs into jail handed six-year stretch behind bars

A prison officer caught smuggling class A drugs into a top security jail has been sentenced to more than six years behind bars. Heather McKenzie, 31, brought cocaine and mobile phones into HMP Shotts in North Lanarkshire.

A court heard an investigation was launched in March 2020 and McKenzie was identified as a suspected drugs trafficker. There had been suspicions about the growing number of drugs found in cells.

Further intelligence suggested McKenzie had formed a close bond with a prisoner serving a life term. The prisoner’s cell was searched twice and officers found quantities of cocaine and an iPhone, which on examination was found to contain calls and WhatsApp messages to McKenzie’s own mobile.

Data recovered from the phones revealed McKenzie discussed smuggling drugs into the prison on six separate occasions. The court heard the prisoner arranged for unidentified individuals to meet with McKenzie to drop off drugs, phones and money.

Meetings were then arranged at various locations, including McKenzie’s home address. Police officers who carried out a search of her home removed a haul which included £2,500 in cash, syringes, steroids, cocaine and benzocaine, which was recovered from a first aid box in a garden shed.

She was sentenced at the High Court in Glasgow (Jane Barlow/PA)

McKenzie, from Forth in South Lanarkshire, pleaded guilty at the High Court in Lanark last month to charges of supplying a prisoner and others with controlled drugs, phones and a Sim card. She was jailed for six years and three months when she appeared at the High Court in Glasgow for sentencing on Thursday, the Crown Office said.

The court was told McKenzie, a first offender, appeared to have been paid money to smuggle the contraband into the prison. David Green, procurator fiscal for homicide and major crime, welcomed the sentence and said McKenzie, as a prison officer, had committed a severe breach of trust.

He said: “The public rightly must have confidence in prison officers to uphold the law. This individual abused her position and fell far short of the standards of professional conduct the public are entitled to expect from members of her profession. I hope this sentence sends a strong message to others involved in this kind of criminal behaviour and demonstrates that prosecutors will ensure that people who act otherwise than in accordance with their duties in public office will be brought to justice.”

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