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Building in Colorado, United States of America From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Colorado State Penitentiary (commonly abbreviated CSP) is a Level V maximum security prison in the U.S. state of Colorado. The facility is part of the state's East Cañon Complex, together with six other state correctional facilities of various security levels.
Location | E US Highway 50 Evans Blvd, Cañon City, Colorado, U.S. |
---|---|
Capacity | 756 |
Opened | 1993 |
Managed by | Colorado Department of Corrections |
CSP is located in Fremont County, just east of the county seat Cañon City, Colorado. It is one of 25 prisons in the Colorado Department of Corrections system, and one of seven in and around Cañon City.
The oldest of the seven, originally built in 1871 and predating Colorado's statehood, was the original State Penitentiary.[citation needed] This was the site of Colorado's death row, and the 1929 prison riot.[citation needed] After the 1993 construction of the current facility, that prison was re-dedicated as the medium-security Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility.[citation needed] It is located within the city limits of Cañon City.[1]
Other prisons in the East Cañon Complex include the Arrowhead Correctional Center, the Centennial Correctional Facility, Four Mile Correctional Center, the Fremont Correctional Facility, and Skyline Correctional Center, all nearby in unincorporated Fremont County. The Colorado Women's Correctional Facility near Cañon City in unincorporated Fremont County was decommissioned on June 4, 2009.[2][3]
Today CSP houses some of Colorado's most dangerous, most violent and most disruptive prisoners. It also held the state's lethal injection chamber for execution of the death penalty. The prisoners with death sentences were held on "death row" at Sterling Correctional Facility.[4]
All inmates at Colorado State Penitentiary are held in solitary confinement, officially termed Administrative Segregation (AdSeg).[5] AdSeg inmates are all held in solitary cells on 23-hour lockdown for their entire sentence. CSP allows offenders out of their cells for an hour per day, including yard time. Such conditions have been held to be adverse for prisoners' mental health and can aggravate existing mental problems.[6] Prolonged solitary confinement has been argued to constitute torture and to violate international law.[7][8]
As of 2011 the prison has 984 prisoners.[9]
When the Colorado State Penitentiary opened, death row was moved there from the Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility.[9] Colorado has had no physical death row since 2011, when the State of Colorado moved its death row prisoners to the Sterling Correctional Facility.[10] This was done in settlement of a federal lawsuit filed by Nathan Dunlap, a death row prisoner who had complained about the adverse effects of his physical and mental health of the state's lack of outdoor exercise facilities at Colorado State Penitentiary.[9] By state statute, inmates sentenced to death are executed at the Colorado State Penitentiary. Each is held here for the week before a scheduled execution in a separate holding cell located in the execution suite. All prisoners with death sentences are classified as "securest custody level, administrative segregation".[10]
Capital Punishment was abolished by the legislature for any crime committed after July 2020 in Colorado, with the only three men on death row being granted clemency from suffering death by governor Jared Polis.
CSP was the focus of the documentary series National Geographic Explorer episode "Solitary Confinement".[22] The episode was first broadcast April 11, 2010.
The original penitentiary was the subject of the 1948 semi-documentary Canon City, chronicling the December 30, 1947, prison break of 12 inmates. Principal filming was conducted in the prison and environs of Cañon City six months after the actual event.
Maximum Insecurity, an Amazon bestseller, gives an inside look at the medical system at the Colorado State Penitentiary.[23]
In Tallgrass, a novel by Sandra Dallas, Bobby Archuleta, a beet farmer who confesses to raping and killing his sister-in-law, a teenage girl with polio, is sent to the Colorado State Penitentiary after confessing.[24]
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