He returns to prison with 17 drug ovules in his intestine, he is in serious condition.
E' returned to prison with 17 ovules of cocaine in his intestine, after a permit, but one ovule has opened and the prisoner now risks his life in the intensive care unit of a Neapolitan hospital: it happened yesterday, in the Bellizzi Irpino prison. The news was reported by Vincenzo Palmieri and Luigi Castaldo, secretaries of Osapp.
For the two Osapp unionists, once again the Penitentiary Police staff demonstrates high professional skills despite the strong critical issues and operational difficulties, due to a serious lack of staff in the Campania penitentiaries and in particular in those of Ariano Irpino and Bellizzi.
“Therefore our applause - they write - goes to those blue berets on duty on the front line who yesterday with their scrupulous commitment, made the two Avellino penitentiaries safe, avoiding an Epiphany drug party”.
Palmieri and Castaldo continue: 'Unfortunately, despite the benefits provided and granted by law by the magistrates of surveillance on duty, many prisoners have no qualms about committing crimes and this must lead us to reflect so that we can make the necessary legislative and deterrent changes to these unfortunate phenomena that destabilize the order and security of our penitentiaries. In this regard, it would be interesting to understand what the guarantors of prisoners think, from the national to the regional, and now also the provincial.
According to Osapp Secretary General Leo Beneduci, "the legislator should, with the appropriate support of suitable institutional figures, work with preventive and restrictive measures to contrast the various and dangerous criminal phenomena within penitentiaries with incisive and deterrent laws, useful for safeguarding the collective interest and especially the image of the Penitentiary Police Corps".
Article published on 6 January 2021 - 12:22