Eight Jailed Over Smuggling Scam at HMP Winchester

Eight people have been handed jail sentences totalling over eight years after a serious probe uncovered a smuggling ring at HMP Winchester. The gang ran a conspiracy to sneak banned items into the prison, reportedly kicking off back in early 2015.

Prison Smugglers Sentenced After Lengthy Investigation

The guilty verdicts came down at Southampton Crown Court on 16 November, following guilty pleas by all involved. Here’s how it breaks down:

  • Rhonda Pack, 21 from Gosport, got eight months for conspiring to smuggle mobile phones and drugs (List ‘A’ banned items) into the prison.
  • Christopher Byles, 28 received the same eight-month sentence for the same offences.
  • Danielle Carr, 30 was handed a year after admitting involvement in smuggling phones, drugs, and facilitating criminal property.
  • Rebecca Vaughan, 24 received eight months for conspiracy to smuggle phones, possession, and criminal property dealings.
  • Sophie Lennards, 30 got 15 months for plotting to smuggle phones and drugs.
  • Connie Rooke, 26 was given a four-month suspended sentence for facilitating criminal property acquisition.
  • Ben Carr, 25 (ex-inmate) was jailed for three years for smuggling phones and drugs into the jail.
  • Suritai Phanthiva, 28 (ex-inmate) got three years for conspiracy to smuggle drugs and had a previous 16-month sentence for phone smuggling.

Inside the Smuggling Operation

Detectives uncovered the scam after a mobile phone was found in a cell in April 2015. Phone forensics exposed deleted texts and calls linking gang members — inmates and outsiders — to efforts to sneak in phones, spice, cannabis, and steroids.

The network hired helpers to bring packages into the prison, which the ringleaders then distributed inside. The investigation lasted two years due to the conspiracy’s complexity.

Officials Speak Out on the Serious Consequences

“This case reveals the hard graft by prison staff and police to expose criminal conspiracies smuggling contraband at HMP Winchester,” said Stephanie Robert-Bibby, Governor of Winchester Prison. “This sends a strong message: such crimes will be uncovered and punished.”

Senior Investigator DCI Ellie Hurd added: “Drugs and phones in prison have devastating effects—on health, safety, and rehabilitation. Violence linked to drug debts often spills into the community.”

She highlighted the danger of psychoactive substances like spice, pointing out prisoners could be coerced into testing new batches — risking serious harm or even death.

“These sentences reflect the grave nature of the offences,” DCI Hurd said. “Our team’s dedication in this tough, two-year probe finally brought these offenders to justice.”

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