Georgia’s New Drug Crisis: The Strip Epidemic Inside State Prisons
Toxic strips flood Georgia prisons via mail, endangering inmates and exposing critical security vulnerabilities in state facilities.
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In Georgia prisons, 25+ inmates per 80-man dorm smoke synthetic drugs daily from paper strips mailed through GDC's own mail system. Officers step over bodies passed out on floors. https://gps.press/georgias-new-drug-crisis-the-strip-epidemic-inside-state-prisons/
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Georgia's prisons are experiencing a hidden chemical crisis. Inmates are smoking synthetic drugs soaked into paper strips that arrive through regular mail. In one 80-man dorm, 25 inmates get high multiple times daily while a dozen lie unconscious on floors at any given time. The Georgia Department of Corrections knows exactly how these drugs enter—through their own mail system—yet refuses to implement chemical screening or digital mail systems that other states use successfully. Non-using inmates are forced to breathe toxic secondhand smoke in poorly ventilated spaces. How long will we allow this mass poisoning to continue unchecked? https://gps.press/georgias-new-drug-crisis-the-strip-epidemic-inside-state-prisons/
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Georgia prisons are flooding with synthetic drugs called "strips"—paper soaked in chemicals and mailed through GDC's own system. Inmates smoke these $0.79 pieces through pen tubes, leaving dozens unconscious on dorm floors daily. Officers step over the bodies. Non-users are forced to breathe toxic smoke in unventilated spaces. The state could stop this with chemical mail screening but chooses not to act. This is systematic poisoning disguised as neglect.
#GeorgiaPrisons #PrisonReform #CriminalJustice #GPS #MassIncarceration #Georgia https://gps.press/georgias-new-drug-crisis-the-strip-epidemic-inside-state-prisons/
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Georgia's correctional system is experiencing a synthetic drug epidemic that exposes fundamental failures in mail security and inmate safety protocols. Synthetic cannabinoids soaked into paper are being mailed directly into facilities, where they're cut into "strips" and sold for less than a dollar each. In some dormitories, over 30% of the population uses these substances multiple times daily, creating health hazards for all residents through secondhand exposure to toxic smoke. The Georgia Department of Corrections has available solutions—chemical mail screening, digital correspondence systems, and proper ventilation—but has implemented none of them. This represents a clear policy failure with measurable public health consequences that demands immediate legislative oversight and corrective action. https://gps.press/georgias-new-drug-crisis-the-strip-epidemic-inside-state-prisons/