A former federal prison nurse in Miami will spend the next six years in prison for illegally smuggling drug-soaked sheets of paper for inmates and accepting bribes that netted him $150,000, U.S. prosecutors announced Friday.

Ruben Montanez-Mirabal, 33, was sentenced in Miami federal court Wednesday, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of Florida. Montanez-Mirabal’s sentencing comes after he pleaded guilty in March to conspiring to receive bribes and bringing drugs into the Federal Detention Center, prosecutors said.

Ex-federal prison nurse used an elaborate scheme to smuggle drugs

From November 2021 through late August 2022, Montanez-Mirabal illegally took payments from inmates to smuggle in more than 100 pages soaked with synthetic cannabinoids into the downtown Miami prison, authorities said.

Montanez-Mirabal would deliver the drugs directly to the inmates or hide them in places where inmates could find them later. The inmates would sell the drugs for about $1,500 per page, prosecutors said.

In exchange for the deals, Montanez-Mirabal made about $150,000 in bribes and also got free access to luxury cars including a Lamborghini and a Rolls-Royce, prosecutors said.

Synthetic cannabinoids are becoming big problems in correctional facilities, expert says

Synthetic cannabinoids, also referred to as “SC,” “K2” or “Spice,” are part of a group of drugs called new psychoactive substances (NPS), according to the National Institutes of Health.

They are “human-made mind-altering chemicals that are either sprayed on dried, shredded plant material so they can be smoked or sold as liquids to be vaporized and inhaled in e-cigarettes and other devices,” the NIH said. They are called cannabinoids due to similar chemicals found in marijuana and are often called synthetic marijuana or fake weed and seen as a misleading alternative, the NIH added.