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California State Prison, Solano
Male-only state prison in Vacaville, California From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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California State Prison, Solano (SOL) is a male-only state prison located in the city of Vacaville in Solano County, California, adjacent to California Medical Facility. The facility is also referenced as Solano State Prison, CSP-Solano, and CSP-SOL.[3][4][5]
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Facilities
Solano State Prison
- Prison sign with California state seal
- Entrance to Solano State Prison
- Aerial view of Solano State Prison (left) with California Medical Facility in the background (right)
SOL's 146 acres (59 ha) include the following facilities, among others:[3]
- Level II housing: Open dormitories with secure perimeter fences and armed coverage
- Level III housing: Individual cells, fenced perimeters and armed coverage
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Population and staff
As of fiscal year 2006/2007, SOL had a total of 1,308 staff and an annual operating budget of $158.4 million.[6] As of February 2011, it had a design capacity of 2,610 but a total institution population of 5,050, for an occupancy rate of 193.5 percent.[7]
As of July 31, 2022, SOL was incarcerating people at 124.7% of its design capacity, with 3,255 occupants.[8]
History

The California State Prison at Solano opened in August 1984.[9] SOL was overseen by the warden of California Medical Facility until January 1992, when a separate warden was assigned.[10] By 1998, SOL was so crowded that "emergency triple bunks" were added.[11] In 2008/2009 triple bunking was removed and the gyms by August 2009 were not holding inmates.[citation needed]
A 2001 U.S. District Court ruling and a 2002 U.S. Court of Appeals decision supported the "right of Muslim inmates" at SOL "to attend regular weekly religious services and wear beards in accordance with their faith".[12]
Notable inmates (current or former)
- William Ray Bonner (born 1948), spree killer[22]
- Anthony Jacques Broussard (born c. 1965), murderer of Marcy Renee Conrad[14]
- Spoon Jackson (born 1957), poet[23]
- Sanyika Shakur (1963–2021), gang member; was interviewed at SOL; paroled[14][24]
- Johnny Spain (born 1949), member of the San Quentin Six; paroled in 1988[25]
- James Tramel (c. 1967), Episcopal priest convicted of murder; was paroled by Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2006[26][27]
- Anthony Wimberly (born 1962), serial killer; sentenced to three years for burglary and robbery; paroled in 1983. Currently at Mule Creek State Prison.
- Jarad Nava, from They Call Us Monsters paroled in 2020
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References
External links
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