This article's factual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date information. The reason given is: Major changes to the prison were completed in 2018. (April 2019) |
Auckland Prison (original name Paremoremo Prison, colloquially Pare, pronounced "Par-re") is a prison facility consisting of medium security and maximum security compounds in Paremoremo, Auckland, New Zealand. The two compounds are separate but located close together in a rural area.
The prison contains New Zealand's only specialist maximum-security unit, housing some of the most severe criminals in the country. Its old names of 'Paremoremo' and 'Pare' are still well-known and used throughout New Zealand.
The land was bought for the prison in 1962 and after the 1965 Mt Eden prison riots construction was expedited, with the prison officially opening in March 1969. [1]
Organisation
editFacilities
editAuckland Prison has beds for 680 prisoners.[2] It includes the medium-security Auckland West division, built in 1981 to relieve crowding at other institutions, particularly at Mount Eden Prison; a minimum security work and pre-release unit called Te Mahinga; and a 60-bed special treatment unit for child sex offenders, called Te Piriti.[3]
Within the maximum security prison, there is section formerly called 'D Block', where conditions in it are very restrictive, and there are around three prison officers per inmate of the block.[4]
Security
editSecurity was upgraded significantly in the 1990s and 2000s. David Connor, the prison chaplain, noted that when he moved to Paremoremo in 1984, a chain-link fence around the medium-security block was all that was required. In 2010, however, the maximum security part of the prison, East Division, is surrounded by a highly secure perimeter fence covered in razor wire. Razor wire is also laid between the unit and the fence. East Wing has only one point of entry which has a highly sensitive scanner that every person must pass through.
Anyone carrying items into East Division is required to bring them through in a clear plastic bag. Every person entering is also liable to be searched. East Division has a centralised CCTV system, with cameras monitored from the control room in the centre of the wing at all times. All cells are made of solid concrete and have bars on the windows. All exercise yards are enclosed. There is also a higher staff/prisoner ratio in east block than in other units.
West Division accommodates high-medium security prisoners. Like East Wing, it has only one point of entry and any person entering the unit is liable to be searched. There are also CCTV cameras monitored from the guardroom, and sensors between the fences of the West Division.
There is also one minimum security unit, one low-medium security unit and the Te Piriti unit, which houses low security prisoners. These units have a lower level of security as prisoners in these units are deemed to be a minimal risk to public safety.
In case of a serious incident, guards have few options but to call the police. Corrections officers have repeatedly warned that violent inmates are becoming more of a problem (in Paremoremo and the New Zealand corrections system in general).[4][5]
After a serious attack by inmates on a prison guard in July 2007, a member of the staff anonymously complained to The New Zealand Herald about security procedures being inadequate, and said the prison was more like a 'holiday camp' for prisoners - especially in the case of those considered especially dangerous, alleging that prison management gives in to most of their demands to keep the peace.[6]
Notable inmates
edit- Dean Wickliffe has escaped from Auckland Prison twice.[7]
- Triple murderer William Bell was being held in the maximum security Delta Block in 2007.[8]
- George Charlie Baker, who killed a teenage boy in a prison van, is a prisoner.[9]
- Convicted murderer Antonie Dixon was being held in the maximum security area, awaiting sentencing, when he died in February 2009.[10]
- Scott Watson, who was convicted of a double murder at Furneaux Lodge in the Marlborough Sounds on 1 January 1998, was once a prisoner in the maximum security area before he was transferred to Christchurch Men's Prison.
- Brenton Tarrant is held in isolation in the maximum security area for perpetrating the Christchurch mosque shootings.[11][12]
- Paul Wood, author, motivational speaker, life coach, and psychologist
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Prisons in a changing society, 1949–1990". teara.govt.nz. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
- ^ "Auckland Prison's $300m new wing includes sensory garden, health centre". Stuff. 16 July 2018. Retrieved 1 September 2021.
- ^ "Preventing Child Sexual Abuse". The Lucy Faithfull Foundation. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
- ^ a b "Over one hundred lawyers inside Paremoremo prison Archived September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine" - Auckland District Law Society Newsletter, Issue No. 20, 2004
- ^ "Prison officers call for weapons after hostage drama at Paremoremo" - The New Zealand Herald, 9 November 2006
- ^ Cheng, Derek (1 August 2007). "Prison guard: Paremoremo like a 'holiday camp'". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
- ^ Morton, Jamie (30 March 2012). "Recidivist criminal back in prison for making P". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
- ^ Koubaridis, Andrew (13 July 2009). "Killer admits stabbing at Paremoremo". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
- ^ "Hostage taker among New Zealand's worst". The New Zealand Herald. 27 August 2009. Retrieved 16 December 2009.
- ^ "Corrections 'stuffed up', says Dixon's lawyer". The New Zealand Herald. 5 February 2009.
- ^ "Man accused of Christchurch mosque shootings pleads not guilty to 51 murder charges". Stuff. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
- ^ "Mental health tests for NZ attack suspect". BBC News. 4 April 2019. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
Further reading
edit- Meek, John (1986). Paremoremo : New Zealand’s maximum security prison. New Zealand Penal Division. Penal Division, Dept. of Justice. ISBN 9780477072069. OCLC 78955851.
- McCarthy, Christine (2022-12-13), "Inside Paremoremo", Architectural History Aotearoa, no. 19, pp. 83–93, doi:10.26686/aha.v19i.8050