|
|
| Drug Deal Alleged in Mass. Jail |
| By Boston Globe |
| Published: 07/14/2003 |
|
A Massachusetts inmate has been charged in federal court with three counts of trying to acquire and sell heroin in the Billerica jail, with an officer's help. Russell Chiary Jr., 43, of Somerville, was charged June 18 in an indictment detailing the alleged scheme, the US attorney's office said yesterday in a statement. From December 2002 to March, the indictment alleges, Chiary conspired with others, including former corrections officer Mark O'Brien, to smuggle heroin into the Billerica House of Correction, in exchange for OxyContin, a prescription pain reliever. Details of the case were in an affidavit filed in a related case by O'Brien, the former prison officer, who authorities said admitted planning to help Chiary smuggle drugs into the prison. O'Brien, 42, of North Billerica, pleaded guilty June 5 before Chief US District Judge William G. Young to conspiracy to distribute and possess heroin. He is to be sentenced July 22. When authorities learned of the alleged plan to sell drugs in the jail, they planted an undercover agent to act as the supply source for Chiary. The agent contacted O'Brien and arranged to deliver him a quantity of heroin, which O'Brien intended to sneak into prison. On March 26, according to the indictment, the agent met O'Brien, gave him the heroin along with a payment of OxyContin, and arrested him. Chiary, who is being held at the Plymouth House of Correction, could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted, followed by three years supervised release and a $1 million fine, authorities said. Middlesex County Sheriff Jim DiPaola said inmates' efforts to befriend corrections officers are a ''constant risk that we have to be aware of.'' |

Comments:
No comments have been posted for this article.
Login to let us know what you think