New high-tech X-ray scanners thwart 28,000 attempts to smuggle
  contraband behind bars.
  - even more jails deploy cutting-edge baggage scanners for
  prison visitors
  
 
  - measures part of £125 million strategy to clamp down on
  prison rule breakers and cut crime
  
 
  Game-changing X-ray body scanners have foiled more than 28,000
  attempts to smuggle drugs, phones and weapons behind bars as the
  war on prison rule breakers picks up speed.
  Over the last 2 years, more than 90 new advanced scanners have
  been installed in all closed male jails, producing
  high-resolution images of concealed contraband so staff can stop
  more dangerous items from getting in and causing havoc on prison
  landings.
  This tough new security has captured and confiscated illegal
  contraband concealed on prisoners including mobile phones, vapes
  and improvised weapons.
  Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary, , said:
  Our tough new security measures in prisons are putting prisoners
  back on the straight and narrow. Allied to our renewed drive to
  get prisoners off drugs for good, we are cutting crime and
  keeping the public safe.
  This new development comes just days after the government
  announced plans to roll out cutting-edge baggage scanners to 45
  prisons across England and Wales. These will check bags brought
  in by the thousands of staff and visitors who enter prisons every
  day – cutting off another route of smuggling. Together these
  measures have kept mobile phones, drugs and improvised weapons
  out of the hands of prisoners where they would fuel violence and
  disorder.
  The government’s investment of up to £125 million in
  next-generation prison security measures has also seen the most
  challenging prisons kitted out with new handheld and archway
  metal detectors, and more than 150 specially trained drug sniffer
  dogs.
  This investment has created a new team of specialist
  investigators to clamp down on the small minority of corrupt
  staff who have no place in the Prison Service.
  And to clamp down on the pernicious smuggling of drugs via prison
  mail, jails have installed over 135 drug trace detection machines
  that can detect microscopic smears of new psychoactive substances
  such as ‘spice’ on letters and items of clothing.
  These advances deliver on the government’s commitments outlined
  in the Prisons Strategy White Paper. This will also see the
  rollout of abstinence-based treatment for prisoners addicted to
  drugs or alcohol and tougher sentences for terrorist prisoners
  who break the rules behind bars.
  Notes to editors
  - Since July 2020, 28,626 suspicious items were identified by
  new prison X-ray body scanners