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Kinross Correctional Facility

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Status
  
Open

Warden
  
Duncan MacLaren

Zip code
  
49788

Capacity
  
1,280

Security class
  
Levels I and II

Opened
  
1978

Phone
  
+1 906-495-2282

City
  
Kincheloe

Former name
  
Hiawatha Correctional Facility

Managed by
  
Michigan Department of Corrections

Street address
  
4533 W. Industrial Park Drive

Address
  
4533 W Industrial Dr, Kincheloe, MI 49788, USA

Similar
  
Oaks Correctional Facility, Alger Correctional Facility, Earnest C Brooks Correctio, Carson City Correctio, Richard A Handlon Correctio

Kinross Correctional Facility (KCF) is a Michigan prison, located in Kincheloe, which houses adult male prisoners. The original facility closed in October 2015, with most of the inmates relocating to the formerly closed Hiawatha Correctional Facility. Upon the move, the Kinross Correctional Facility name was transferred to the reopened complex.

Contents

History

The original Kinross Correctional Facility closed in October 2015, with most of the inmates and the name moving to the formerly closed Hiawatha Correctional Facility.

Original facility

The original Kinross Correctional Facility was opened on January 16, 1978 on the barracks grounds of the former Kincheloe Air Force Base with an original capacity of 495 prisoners - which was increased to approximately 700 shortly after. At 113 acres (46 ha) it was the largest fenced area of any state prison in Michigan.

The original facility was closed in October 2015, having gained the ability to house almost 1,600 inmates. Approximately 1,280 inmates were relocated to the previously closed Hiawatha Correctional Facility and 300 transferred to the neighboring Chippewa Correctional Facility. The move was made when it was determined that it would be less costly to update the security at the Hiawatha facility than the original prison. The original facility was larger and held more inmates but had been converted from Air Force barracks in 1978, whereas Hiawatha was purposely built as a prison.

Hiawatha Correctional Facility

Hiawatha Correctional Facility (HTF) was built as a prison near the Kinross facility and opened in 1989.

The facility closed in August 2009.

It was reopened and renamed Kinross Correctional Facility when that facility closed in October 2015.

Escape attempts

Over the course of two years, four inmates dug a tunnel from their cell to the outside of the perimeter fence of the original facility. The plot was only discovered in March 2007, after the tunnel had been completed but the escape had to be delayed in order to find a getaway driver.

On July 15, 2010, Three inmates, all men convicted of mass murders, hijacked a supply truck at the prison and attempted to escape from the original facility by breaking it through a fence. The truck was unable to break through, getting stuck on the razor-wire. Seth Privacky, in prison for the murder of five members of his family, was shot and killed by guards as he attempted to flee the truck. The other two gave up when the truck became stuck.

Facility

The current facility is composed of eight level II housing units, which can accommodate up to 1,280 prisoners. KCF also maintains a housing unit near the site of the former facility housing 320 level I prisoners. The 50 acre prison has ten buildings which includes an administration building, programs building, maintenance, food service and indoor activity areas.

Security

The facility is surrounded by two fences with razor-ribbon wire with electronic security devices. Armed staff are also utilized to maintain perimeter security.

Services

The facility offers education programs, substance-abuse treatment, religious services, group psychotherapy, psychology, gardening, a music program, and handicraft activities. Onsite medical and dental care are supplemented by local community providers, the Brooks Medical Center at Marquette Branch Prison and the Duane L. Waters Hospital in Jackson, Michigan. There is vocational training available in auto repair, construction, custodial maintenance, business education technology, and horticulture. Prisoners in vocational training are also involved in constructing homes with Habitat for Humanity. The prison also has chapters of Vietnam Veterans of America and United States Junior Chamber.

Notable inmates

Notable inmates at Kinross Correctional Facility have included:

  • Jack Kevorkian
  • Joel Dufresne, a reverend with the Church of Creativity
  • Seth Privacky
  • References

    Kinross Correctional Facility Wikipedia