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Wabash Valley Correctional Facility

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Status
  
Operational

Opened
  
December 11, 1992

Population
  
2,080 – Daily average

Security class
  
Minimum to maximum

Phone
  
+1 812-398-5050

Capacity
  
2,125

Wabash Valley Correctional Facility

Location
  
Haddon Township, Sullivan County, near Carlisle, Indiana

Director
  
Richard Brown, Superintendent

Address
  
6908 S Old US Highway 41, Carlisle, IN 47838, USA

Hours
  
Open today · Open 24 hoursThursdayOpen 24 hoursFridayOpen 24 hoursSaturdayOpen 24 hoursSundayOpen 24 hoursMondayOpen 24 hoursTuesdayOpen 24 hoursWednesdayOpen 24 hoursSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Robinson Correctio Center, Federal Correctio Institution, Cow Town USA, Jeromes Pizza, US Penitenti Independ

Wabash Valley Correctional Facility is a prison situated south of Terre Haute, located in Haddon Township, Sullivan County, just north of Carlisle, Indiana.

Contents

Msnbc lockup inside wabash valley correctional facility 2


History

The Wabash Valley Correctional Facility was established in 1992. Designed by Woollen, Molzan and Partners, construction of the facility began on October 29, 1990. A 530-acre (2.1 km2) site north of Carlisle, Indiana, was selected for the new prison because of the area’s low costs and access to U.S. 41. Wabash Valley Correctional Facility received its first group of 20 inmates on December 11, 1992. Although they were all low-medium-security prisoners, they were held in the prison’s super-maximum security section (SHU), because it was the only finished part at the time.

The Wabash Valley Correctional Facility has four security levels, divided into four sub-facilities. These facilities are divided by “internal zone” fences. The maximum security section was divided into four housing units that each have 88 two-man cells. The D-Unit, which was part of the maximum security level, was the administrative segregation and protective custody area. It has 15 cells. The high-medium-security section, consisting of five housing units, holds two inmates to a cell except for the K-Unit, which holds offenders in single cells. The K-Unit is a treatment center for inmates. The minimum-security section, which is outside the fence, was originally intended to house 120 inmates, but currently holds approximately 200 inmates.

Two chain-linked fences surround the prison. The inner fence has razor ribbon on the bottom, center, and top of the fence, and the outer fence has razor ribbon on the top. Between the fences there are intrusion alarm and microwave detection systems. Two armed vehicles guard the perimeter, and there are seven armed towers.

Capacity

It holds approximately 2,125 male adult inmates under security that ranges from minimum to super-maximum in four sub-facilities. This state prison is best known for its super-maximum Secured Housing Unit (SHU) which drew national attention because of the 1997 publication Cold Storage, a report by Human Rights Watch.

Although forty-two percent of inmates at Wabash Valley Correctional Facility are people of color, minority employees make up only three percent of the staff. The proportion of employees of color is lower at Wabash Valley Correctional Facility than at any other prison for men in Indiana except Branchville. This stark disproportion is due to the prison’s location in a rural setting. The nearest largely populated area, Terre Haute, which has a fairly small Black and Hispanic population, is thirty miles from Wabash Valley Correctional Facility. Most of the inmates, meanwhile, come from the state’s urban centers.

Incidents

Within the first three years, the state prison was in the news regarding treatment of inmates. On April 18, 1995, inmate Ted Lee began a hunger strike, claiming that the prison food provided “inadequate nutrition” and medical attention was lacking.

Prison officials claimed that Lee was not eating because of religious reasons, but his mother claimed that he was protesting the conditions. In the following month, six other inmates began their own hunger strike protesting the prison's conditions of confinement. Ted Lee, whose previous hunger strike lasted ten to fourteen days, joined the six inmates. The inmates protested because of violent treatment by guards and lack of medical attention. They also claimed that a staff member threatened to poison their food.

The death of an inmate due to a drug overdose focused attention on drug dealing in the prison. On December 17, 1996, inmate Mark J. Ferrell, #882213, age 26, died of a cocaine overdose after visiting with an acquaintance. The autopsy revealed that he had swallowed thirty balloons, of which twenty-nine contained marijuana and one contained cocaine. When reporters requested the prison’s visitor log and video footage of the visit, prison officials refused to cooperate. They claimed that the video had been taped over. However, the video was eventually released to the press, revealing that Scott Strahle was Mark Ferrell’s last visitor. Ferrell’s cellmate told authorities that Ferrell would drink shampoo to regurgitate the balloons. The prison later revealed that Scott Strahle frequently visited Ferrell and that Ferrell had engaged in a “sex act” with Strahle in a previous visit that was caught on tape. Though this “sex act” was known to have taken place and Ferrell was reprimanded, Strahle was still allowed to visit Ferrell. Strahle eventually turned himself into authorities.

On October 3, 1996, Lee Hoefling, administrative assistant to the superintendent, and Don Tyler, internal affairs investigator, received five-day suspensions without pay for “the miscommunication concerning the existence of the videotape”.

Ferrell’s death raised questions about the extent of the drug problem at Wabash Valley Correctional Facility. Between February 1992 and April 1996, more than one in six inmates tested positive for drugs. Following the death of Mark Ferrell, the Wabash Valley Correctional Facility changed its taping policy and heightened security for inmate visitors.

SHU agreement

In response to a lawsuit brought by the ACLU of Indiana, the Indiana Department of Correction agreed in May 2006 to move all mentally ill inmates from the super-maximum Secured Housing Unit (SHU) by October 2006. According to the Department of Correction’s medical director Dr. Amos Elton, “Studies have shown that people that have a serious psychological disorder may be worsened by being put in these secured housing units.” Since 2000, four inmates in the Secured Housing Unit have killed themselves and several others have badly abused themselves by ripping chunks of flesh from their bodies [1]. In the past, inmates whose mental health greatly deteriorated were sent to the psychiatric care unit in New Castle. However, once they were stabilized they were sent back to the SHU, where their mental health would worsen again according to the lawsuit [2].

Programs for inmates

The Wabash Valley Correctional Facility offers substance abuse, religious, and educational programs, including "Thinking For A Change", a program addressing the inmates’ thought processes that lead them to criminal behavior, Clean Lifestyle Is Freedom Forever (CLIFF), a program assisting inmates addicted to methamphetamines and other drugs, and Purposeful Living Units Serve (PLUS), a faith-based program that intends to strengthen morals and behavior of inmates prior to re-entry into society. Vincennes University and Ivy Tech offer a G.E.D. and Special Education program for inmates at Wabash Valley Correctional Facility. Associate and bachelor's degrees in general studies are offered through Indiana State University and an associate degree and bachelor degree in Business Management are offered by Grace College.

Notable inmates

  • Donald Samons
  • On television

  • The facility has been shown on the MSNBC series Lockup: Extended Stay and Young Kids, Hard Time.
  • References

    Wabash Valley Correctional Facility Wikipedia