Rebar shanks, exposed wires and intense violence: guard blows whistle at HMP - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:17 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NLCBC Investigates

Rebar shanks, exposed wires and intense violence: guard blows whistle at HMP

A correctional officer at Newfoundland and Labrador's largest prison says the crumbling infrastructure and Victorian-era design of Her Majesty's Penitentiary are partially to blame for a myriad of violent incidents that have taken place over the last several years.

Parts of facility date back to the 19th century; it now houses inmates with 21st-century problems

HMP violence

9 years ago
Duration 3:26
A whistleblowing guard reveals what is happening at Her Majesty's Peninsula, and why

A correctional officer atNewfoundland and Labrador's largest prison says the crumbling infrastructure and Victorian-eradesign of Her Majesty's Penitentiary are partially to blame for amyriadof violent incidents that have taken place over the last several years.

The officer, whom CBC Newshas agreed not to name, said inmates have usedpieces of the agingprison as weapons. And holes and crevices made in ceilings and drywall create opportune hiding places for drugs and weapons.

"We have metal in the ceilings and we've found numerous metal shanks over the years fromrebar (reinforcing bar)out of the ceilings," he explained.

"[There are] live wires exposed and despite it being reported by officers and I believe even bymanagersfor some reason, it doesn't get fixed and goes on for months and years."

The original stone jail was built in 1859 and has since been upgraded and expanded over the decades. The photo, taken from CBC's archives, shows the Her Majesty's Penitentiary in the 1960s. (CBC)

While the number of assaults may not have increased, he said, the level of violence has.

Numbers released by the Department of Justice and Public Safety show that there were 73 assaults on inmates recorded in correctional facilities province-wide last year.

From January to August, there have been 52 an average of about two per week.

"It's difficult to see someone you'veknownfor 10 or20 years beaten within an inch of their lives while you're looking in through the glass.- Correctional officer

"Anything could occur from a hockey-type fight to an extremely violentassault with numerous inmates, resulting in broken bones, major lacerations, head trauma," he told CBC News.

"Most fights now moreso now rather than years ago involve stomping, kicks to the head, stomping to the head."

Fuelling the problemis the lack of space available to keep feudinginmatesapart, he said.

Incompatibles, as they're called, are meant to be kept in separate sections of the prison to decrease the risk of violence.

This still image from a YouTube video shows the damages caused by inmates during a riot in August 2013. (YouTube)

However, the prison, which dates back to the1850s, isn't built to facilitate that.

"We have so many incompatibles we don't have enough living areas to have them separated," he said.

"Quite often when they are separated they areseparatedon an A side and B sidecorridorand once they leave thosecorridorsor ranges as we call them to go to a program orrecreation,they come out together, and they're walking in the same hallways and the same areas. So essentially, you're not preventing anything."

Mental toll

Working inside an environment as volatile as a prison can be trying at the best of times, he said. Add an increased level of violence and a decaying structure, and the affect on staff is particularly negative.

"We havethe same inmates back over and over, and over years of working there you build slight connections with these inmates," he said.

"Asidefromthe violence itself, it's sometimes difficult to see someone you'veknownfor 10 or20 years beaten within an inch of their life while you're looking in through the glass."

Correctional officers do have access to theemployee assistance program that provides counseling services. As well, the correctional officer said, debriefings are held following major incidents, but they aren't addressing the core problem.

"As these levels of violence become more common, they become normal and debriefings tend to get left by thewaysideand therefore only the very extreme incidents end up debriefed."

Over time, he said, the resultis correctional officers dealing with mental illness and forms of post-traumatic stress disorder. All of which, he said, plays a role in the numbers of sick days an officer takes and contributes to staff shortages.

HMP replacement

The governmenthas highlighted the need fora new prisonover the last decade. It is ahot topic among correctional staff.

In 2007, the province hired a consultant to find the best location for a new penitentiary.

Following that, a2008 report probing the province's correctional facilities titled Decades of Darkness noted HMP had "outlived its life expectancy."

"The panel believes there is an urgent need to move forward with this plan in order to provide a humane, safe environment for correctional staff and inmates," the report said.

And following a potentially-deadly attack and riot inside the prison's chapel in February 2014, then-justice minister Terry French said replacing the antiquated institution was a priority.

"We'll have it as soon as we possibly can," French said at the time.

Last year, the provincial government choseParkin Architects, a Canadian company with offices in Toronto, Ottawa and Vancouver, for thedesign and location of a new prison.

But any immediate planto build a replacement was swallowed upby the billion-dollar-plus pool of red ink in this year's provincial budget. Several projects including a new prison, new courthouse and a replacement for the Waterford Hospital were put off indefinitely.

In a statement to CBC News, the department said it does all it can to mitigate any risks to inmates and staff.

The statement cites an increase in staff training and equipment,as well as upgrades to spaces within the prison and updated security features.

The whistleblower is calling on the province to act quickly to replace the facility and look for solutions in the interim to improve the work environment for staff.

"There needs to be inquiry into how sick that environment isand there has to be something put in place, whether it is time off to certainpeoplewho need it," he said.

"I don't have the answers, but it's a disaster."

Statement on HMPMobile users: View the document
Statement on HMP (PDF 71.8KB)
Statement on HMP (Text 71.8KB)
CBC is not responsible for 3rd party content