Millhaven Institution

Millhaven Institution

Aerial image of Millhaven Institution
Location Bath, Ontario
Coordinates 44.1973° N, 76.7523° W
Status Operational
Security class Maximum security
Capacity 413
Opened 1971
Managed by Corrections Canada
Warden Kevin Snedden

Millhaven Institution is a maximum security prison located in Bath, Ontario. Approximately 500 inmates are incarcerated at Millhaven.[1]

Opened in 1971, Millhaven was originally built to replace Ontario's other aging maximum security prison, Kingston Penitentiary in Kingston Ontario. A riot at Kingston Penitentiary forced Millhaven to open prematurely.[2] During the period of 1977–1984, a Special Handling Unit (SHU) operated at Millhaven, alongside its general maximum-security population.[3] A new Canada-wide Special Handling Unit was subsequently opened in Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines Quebec, and the Millhaven SHU was closed.

Millhaven also housed the federal inmate intake and assessment unit for the Ontario region. (Millhaven Assessment Unit or MAU until 2013 when the assessment unit was moved to Joyceville High Medium Institute (JAU) in order to facilitate the closing of Kingston Pen).[4] Federal parole violators were returned to MAU (from whatever Ontario region they were arrested) to appear in front of the National Parole Board for disposition. Millhaven is one of two identically designed maximum security institutions in Canada. The other is located at Archambault Institution, Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines, Quebec.

Living units

Millhaven consists of three main living units, a segregation unit and a hospital wing. There are approximately 120 men per unit. Units have two levels. Ranges are double-sided and have hydraulically locking metal doors (See video in "External Links" section), housing two inmates per cell. The ranges/cells are designated by alphanumeric code (i.e. B1, H2 etc.).

One of the "Ranges" at Millhaven

Main living units are designated by Alpha codes:

A Unit = Federal Intake and Assessment Unit - Ontario region (MAU) (ranges B, C, & D)[5]

E Unit = Federal Intake and Assessment Unit - Ontario region (MAU) (and institutional workers) (ranges F, G, & H)[6]

I Unit = Administrative Segregation/Special Needs

J Unit = Maximum Security Unit (MSU) (ranges K, L, & M)[7]

N Area = Main intersection and security control hub.

MAU (Millhaven Assessment Unit) houses inmates recently sentenced to federal time, in the Ontario region. They are assessed and placed in other prisons according to security needs.[8] MAU is classified as integrated (housing convicts serving time on all types of charges).

MSU (J unit) houses habitually violent offenders, and is non-integrated (no sex offenders, informants or incompatibles). Many inmates with life sentences are also housed in MSU. It is considered a "gladiator school", and convicts who serve time there are revered in the criminal subculture.[9]

On September 30, 2013 Kingston Penitentiary was closed. Many maximum security inmates housed there were transferred to Millhaven. A new 96 bed facility was constructed within the Millhaven compound, to house inmates from the Kingston Pen closure.[10]

The exact housing arrangements of such inmates as Paul Bernardo and Russell Williams are not known, although It is likely they are in administrative segregation.[11]

Security

The perimeter is surrounded by a double 30-foot razor fence, and has observation towers at the corners.

A 4-foot "warning fence" inside the perimeter of the exercise yard acts as a boundary that inmates cannot cross without deadly force being used. Armed patrol vehicles with Colt Canada C7 rifles and parabolic microphones are on guard at all times. There are motion sensors in the outlying property,[12] and multiple CCTV units throughout.[13]

Visitors are subject to personal and vehicle search once on CSC property, and an ION scanner is used upon entry to detect drugs or other compounds on clothing or personal objects. The visiting area is equipped with CCTV, and listening devices are embedded in each table.[14]

Inmates in the MAU (intake - A and E units) are allowed only screened visits, behind glass.

Notable events

Over the years, the institution has seen its share of violence. J unit is considered one of the most dangerous places in Canada's prison system.[15] The most unruly inmates are often housed there.[16]

On July 10, 1972 14 inmates escaped a recreation yard by clipping the chain link fence. A subsequent manhunt was undertaken by police and Canadian Forces personnel. 300 police officers and soldiers from CFB Trenton created a cordon that eventually yielded the capture of most of the escapees. The event was immortalized in song by the Kingston Ontario rock band The Tragically Hip in "38 Years Old" from the "Up to Here" album. The lyrics in fact have the date and number of escapees wrong ("12 men broke loose in '73), this was done for rhyming purposes to match the next line (..."from Millhaven maximum security.) [17][18]

On the first anniversary of the August 10, 1975 suicide of prisoner Edward Nalon in the infamous "back hole" at Millhaven,[19] prisoners at Millhaven refused to work and began a hunger strike for improvements to the prison system.[20] They asserted that their strike was in solidarity with a strike at the British Columbia Penitentiary, and their strike inspired sympathy hunger strikes at Collins Bay Institution and Joyceville Institution.[21]

On July 5, 1985, the warden of Millhaven (Al Stevenson) was placed under police protection due to credible threats to his life. The threats came from unknown Millhaven inmates. He was transferring in to Millhaven from Stony Mountain Institution in Manitoba, where he had a reputation of strictness. Warden Stevenson and his family were placed under guard by the OPP (Ontario Provincial Police).[22] This caution was taken due to the 1978 murder of Archambault Institution warden (Quebec) Michel Roy.[23]

In 2004, correctional officers employed at Millhaven Maximum Security were concerned about their safety after a rash of inmate uprisings. The Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta had ruled that an inmate can conceal a weapon, (when in prison) if he/she is defending themselves. This ruling sparked a rash of weapon related attacks in the living units.[24]

In May 2009, Millhaven was the site of a riot which lasted less than 24 hours.[25]

On October 12, 2010, a correctional officer with a rifle shot a convict who refused orders to stop assaulting another prisoner in an outdoor recreation yard.[26]

On December 7, 2010, 120 inmates in the assessment unit refused to return to their cells at the end of a recreation period. They began to barricade themselves in the area and guards fired shotguns and used chemical agents to gain control of the situation.[27]

On March 21, 2011, inmate Jordan Trudeau, 29, was killed in an altercation. The event took place in the gymnasium area during exercise for maximum security inmates. Trudeau and another inmate, David Bagshaw, 21, attacked a third inmate and were fired upon by correctional officers in an attempt to gain control of the situation. Trudeau was killed by a shot from a 9mm rifle.[28] Bagshaw was wounded, and was charged with attempted murder in regards to the incident.[29] The OPP Prison Squad investigated the incident, and found CSC staff acted properly.[30]

August 11, 2014 the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported that Millhaven Institution was on lockdown to facilitate a major search. Containers that store cereal had gone missing, and was of concern enough to lock down the prison.[31] During the lockdown a serious inmate on inmate assault took place.[32]

Controversy

David Martin, a manager at Millhaven, was arrested in August 2010 and convicted of smuggling various narcotics into the prison, apparently in connection with the Hell's Angels. He was found dead in his home on August 21, 2011.[33]

In late April 2013 the Canadian Press acquired freedom of information documents indicating that Federal Public Safety Minister Vic Toews overruled the Millhaven warden, who had approved a Radio interview with Omar Khadr.[34]

In February 2014, an investigation was launched by the Office of the Correctional Investigator of Canada, due to complaints regarding the treatment of mentally ill inmates. These inmates had been transferred to Millhaven after the closure of RTC (Regional Treatment Centre) at Kingston Penitentiary. Photos released to the public, show questionable facilities and cleanliness in that unit. Some mentally ill inmates had symptoms worsen upon arriving at Millhaven.[35] There was also concern by the John Howard Society of Canada, that the underground "bunker-like" location was a very negative atmosphere for these inmates.[36]

Corcan

Millhaven MSU inmates can gain employment in the CORCAN industries shop. Furniture for federal government offices is fabricated there. Inmates receive a small daily wage for this work, approximately $5.00 a day. Room and board fees are charged to these workers. [37]

National security

In April 2006, a new division was created to house inmates being held on security certificates. It has been dubbed "Guantanamo North".[38] Omar Khadr was transferred to Millhaven from Guantanamo Bay on September 28, 2012, and subsequently transferred to Edmonton Maximum Security Penitentiary on May 28, 2013 due to threats made on his life in Millhaven. Members of a 2006 terrorist plot to attack Canadian targets are incarcerated at Millhaven.[39]

The song "38 Years Old" by The Tragically Hip refers to an escape from the prison. The opening lines of the song say "12 men broke loose in '73, from Millhaven Maximum Security." There was such an escape in 1972. The lyrics of the song were changed to '73 to rhyme with "maximum security", and there were 14 escapees not 12. The remainder of the song alludes to fiction.[40]

The track "Caller Go Ahead" on Canadian performer Bruce McCulloch's 2002 comedy album Drunk Baby Project features a caller on a sports radio show who is not able to watch televised games while at Millhaven.

Stephen Reid (bank robber of The Stopwatch Gang fame) stated that he was told by an aboriginal inmate whilst incarcerated at Millhaven in 1971 that it was built on a native burial ground. This meant the prison would be forever cursed, and a place of turmoil.[41]

References

  1. "MILLHAVEN INSTITUTION Bath, Ontario". Correctional Service of Canada. Retrieved 2011-05-26.
  2. 1971 Kingston Pen Riot
  3. Jackson, Michael. "ADMINISTRATIVE SEGREGATION IN THE 1980s - SHU". justicebehindthewalls.net. Retrieved 2014-08-18.
  4. Senstar Case Study - Millhaven
  5. "Millhaven Institution - Range Upgrades A Unit". Correctional Service Of Canada. Retrieved 2014-08-05.
  6. "Millhaven Institution - Range Upgrades E Unit". Correctional Service Of Canada. Retrieved 2014-08-05.
  7. "Lockdown at Millhaven". Correctional Service of Canada. 2008-02-15. Archived from the original on 2009-09-24.
  8. "Security Classification". Correctional Service of Canada. 2013-08-15.
  9. Contenta, Sandro (2008-07-25). "Crowded prisons crucible for crime". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 2011-05-26.
  10. VandenBrink, Danielle (2012-06-20). "RTC Closure - Kingston". thewhig.com. Sun Media Canada. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  11. "Kingston Penitentiary: Canada's most famous prison closes its doors". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2013-09-29.
  12. "Senstar - Millhaven Case Study" (PDF). Senstar. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
  13. "Notice of Proposed Procurement". Government of Canada. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
  14. Iced: The Story of Organized Crime in Canada. John Wiley & Sons. Retrieved 2014-08-05.
  15. Everest, Paul (2014-07-29). "Battle to move Khadr from Bowden heading to Supreme Court". oldsalbertan.ca. Great West Newspapers LP | Glacier Community Media. Retrieved 2014-11-14.
  16. Contenta, Sandro (2008-07-25). "Crowded prisons crucible for crime". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 2011-05-26.
  17. The Montreal Gazette (1972-07-12). "Escaped Convicts Thought Contained In 10-Mile Square". Retrieved 2015-01-05.
  18. The Montreal Gazette (1972-07-17). "Search area is expanded for missing Millhaven cons". Retrieved 2015-01-05.
  19. Grenada, I.M. "Do these handcuffs make my butt look fat?". TheProvince.com. The Vancouver Province. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
  20. Hunger Strike at Millhaven
  21. "Security Tight at Millhaven," Globe and Mail, August 12, 1975, p2
  22. AP (1985-07-05). "Police watch Millhaven warden after threats". Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  23. Cherry, Paul (2014-05-05). "Man behind warden's murder denied parole". montrealgazette.com. Postmedia Canada. Retrieved 2014-07-15.
  24. "Millhaven guards fear for safety". Kingston Whig Standard. Retrieved 2004-11-03.
  25. Prison riot quelled at Millhaven pen
  26. "Millhaven Inmate Dead". Kingston Whig Standard. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
  27. "Millhaven Inmate Dead". Kingston Whig Standard. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
  28. "Slain prisoner shot by guard". QMI Agency (Canoe.ca). Retrieved 2011-09-09.
  29. "Rengel Killer Bagshaw Charged". Cancrime. Retrieved 2011-09-20.
  30. "Millhaven Inmate Dead". Kingston Whig Standard. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
  31. Millhaven Major Lockdown
  32. "Inmate assaulted during lockdown at Millhaven Institution". thewhig.com. Sun Media. 2014-08-13. Retrieved 2014-08-18.
  33. "Drug-smuggling Millhaven prison worker found dead". CanCrime. Retrieved 2011-09-02.
  34. "Omar Khadr Interview Nixed After 'Overt Political Influence'". Huffington Post. 2013-04-28. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
  35. "Mentally ill inmates kept in 'grossly inadequate' conditions". CBC News. CBC Corporation. 2014-02-27. Retrieved 2014-08-14.
  36. UPI (2014-02-28). "Canadian prison for mentally ill inmates called inadequate". Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  37. "CORCAN is a key rehabilitation program". Correctional Service of Canada. Retrieved 2013-04-29.
  38. "Canadian prison being called Guantanamo North". Retrieved 2014-08-11.
  39. Gillis, Wendy (2013-08-11). "Is Canada doing enough to 'de-radicalize' convicted terrorists?". TheStar.com. The Toronto Star. Retrieved 2014-08-15.
  40. The Escape That Time Forgot
  41. David Wallechinsy; Amy Wallace; Ira Basen & Jane Farrow (2005-12-27). "Stephen Reid's 10 toughest prisons in North America". Retrieved 2010-12-02.

Coordinates: 44°11′50″N 76°45′08″W / 44.19729°N 76.75229°W / 44.19729; -76.75229

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