A pigeon wearing a tiny empty backpack has been captured in a federal prison in British Columbia, which an official says is likely a way for inmates to smuggle drugs.
John Randle, the Pacific regional president at the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers, told The Canadian Press that the pigeon was found inside the Matsqui prison on Feb. 27. The backpack it carried was made of blue jeans and bedsheets—materials easily available to inmates, he said.
Randle previously said that after the first incident, the government has been preoccupied with the increased use of drone smugglers, and that he hasn’t heard of another live pigeon being used for trafficking drugs in the past 13 years.
Following the latest incident, Randle said there is an elementary school close to the federal security facility, which raises concerns about pigeons used for trafficking drugs to inmates landing in the wrong place.
“We are working with the local police because we control what happens inside the fence, but this one here has the potential to have an impact outside of the fence, on the general public as well,” he said.Randle noted that officers are pushing the federal agency Correctional Services of Canada to “step in” and “start taking things seriously” because it’s getting more frequent for people to seek different ways to smuggle drugs into the prison.
Police in Abbotsford said they’re investigating the latest pigeon pack.