Date: Fri 14-Jul-1995
Date: Fri 14-Jul-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
a7-Garner-Crouse-close-custody
Full Text:
GARNER STAYS QUIET AS CLOSE CUSTORY CONTINUES
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
Garner Correctional Institution Warden Frank Crose reports the state's high
security prison on Nunnawauk Road has been running smoothly during recent
months as the state Department of Correction's (DOC) "close custody" program
of incarceration there for crime gang leaders continues.
Warden Crose spoke to members of the Newtown Public Safety Committee July 11
at Garner to update them about what's been happening at the 700-bed
institution since the committee's last session on March 7.
The relative calm at the "Level 4" institution is in contrast to rough times
the sprawling facility experienced in its early months of operation. Garner,
which opened in November 1992, had a prison riot in April 1993 and a double
prisoner escape in August 1993. Following those episodes, the DOC rethought
its incarceration policies and later instituted its close custody program at
Garner to closely hold gang leaders who have proved to be troublemakers in the
state prison system.
"The direction we're headed in is very clear to us," Warden Crose said, noting
that public safety is the DOC's top priority, with other prisoner-related
issues following public safety in their importance.
Garner now houses four cell blocks of close custody prisoners, representing
approximately 390 inmates who get special handling because they pose special
security risks. The prison also houses approximately 200 inmates with mental
health problems, Warden Crose said.
So far, almost 200 inmates have graduated from the close custody program and
only two of them have reverted back to close custody status, according to the
warden.
Close custody incarceration is intended to break inmates' sense of allegiance
to their crime gangs, the warden explained.
Warden Crose said that the results of the close custody program, so far, have
been "excellent." The statistics he provided on close custody are based on the
program's performance during its first year of operation. Three years of
program results probably will be needed to thoroughly evaluate the results of
close custody setup, he said.
In light of improved operations at Garner, it recently was named Prison of The
Year by the DOC, Warden Crose noted.
Three Phases
In the close custody program there are three phases of incarceration. In the
initial phase, which lasts at least 90 days, gang leaders are kept in their
cells 23 hours per day, are allowed only three showers per week, and can speak
on the telephone only twice a week. During the second phase, prisoners are
assembled into 12-man squads and are taught interactive skills.
In the final phase of the program, inmates are taught how to manage their
aggressive behavior. The close custody program takes almost a year to
complete, the warden said.
The close custody cell blocks in Garner are quiet and orderly places unlike
some other prisons where it can become quite noisy, he noted.
Besides the recently opened Northern Correctional Institution in Somers,
Garner is the most structured institution in the state prison system, he said.
Garner has facilities for 7-to-10 day stays of inmates from other prisons with
acute psychiatric problems, he said. After the psychiatric prisoners' acute
phase passes and they are stabilized, they are transported back to the
institution from which they came, Warden Crose said.
No Addition Needed
Previous plans to construct a Garner prison addition for inmate training have
been "put on hold," Warden Crose said. In light of how Garner is now used,
those facilities aren't needed, he said.
The warden said he is waiting for refinements to be made to a new prison
security system which employs fencing and a network of prisoner escape alarms.
The system will have to be improved until it meets DOC specifications, he
said. Warden Crose said he is in no rush to accept a security system which
doesn't yet meet DOC standards.
Mary Taylor, a public safety committee member and a member of the prison
volunteer group known as Justice and Mercy, said Justice and Mercy recently
received an award from the DOC for its work among prisoners.
"I feel completely secure coming in and out (of Garner) all the time," she
said.
More than 200 volunteers overall participate in activities at Garner, Warden
Crose said.
Warden Crose said he will give public safety committee members a tour of
Garner at their next session expected to be held during the first half of
October.
