W.J. Estelle Unit

Prison operated by the U.S. state of Texas From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

W.J. Estelle Unitmap

W. J. "Jim" Estelle Unit[1] (E2, originally the Ellis II Unit) also known as the Estelle Supermax Penitentiary, is a prison located on Farm to Market Road 3478 in unincorporated Walker County, Texas, United States,[2] 10 miles (16 km) north of central Huntsville. The prison, with about 5,459 acres (2,209 ha) of space, is operated by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. The unit, which opened in June 1984, was named after Ward James "Jim" Estelle, a former prison director of Texas.[3]

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A topographic map of the land that would later contain the Estelle Unit, July 1, 1983 - U.S. Geological Survey
Quick Facts Location, Coordinates ...
W. J. "Jim" Estelle Unit
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Location in Texas
Location264 FM 3478
Huntsville, Texas 77320-3320
Coordinates30°53′22″N 95°29′08″W
StatusOperational
Security classG1-G5, Administrative Segregation, Safekeeping, Substance Abuse, Geriatric, Transient Medical Facility: All levels requiring medical treatment
CapacityUnit: 3,148 SAFP (Substance Abuse Felony Punishment): 212 Regional Medical Facility: 120
OpenedJune 1984
Managed byTDCJ Correctional Institutions Division
WardenMichael Britt
CountyWalker County
CountryUS
Websitewww.tdcj.state.tx.us/unit_directory../e2.html
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The Estelle Unit has a geriatric facility, a program for physically handicapped inmates, a program for substance abuse, a high security unit, and a regional medical facility.[4] The Estelle High Security Unit, the high security unit, is a supermax facility. The current warden is Michael Britt, appointed in November, 2022.[5]

History

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Perspective
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Aerial photograph of the Estelle and Ellis units, March 8, 1989, U.S. Geological Survey

The unit opened in 1984.[1] The Estelle High Security Unit was designed in response to an increase in prison violence in the Texas prison system.[6]

Around 1991 TDCJ planned to build a separate facility for elderly inmates.[7] In 1995 the unit received its current name.[8] In 1999, a prisoner named Clifford Dwayne Jones escaped by slipping one of his hands out of a pair of handcuffs and then scaling several walls. The inmate left behind his clothes and shoes, possibly to foil tracking dogs.[5] The inmate was captured about 48 hours after his escape.[8] Jones's escape was the first escape from the high security unit.[5]

On May 12, 2010 Thord "Catfish" Dockray, a prisoner with a history of mental illness, threw urine on correctional officers. Officers ordered him to exit his cell, but he refused. The officers utilized chemical agents to try to subdue Dockray, but he continued his assault. After Dockray was subdued, medics attended to Dockray, who refused medical care. On May 13 the prisoner was found face down in his cell. The prisoner was taken to Huntsville Memorial Hospital, where he died.[9]

As of 2010 a study by the Bureau of Justice Statistics stated that the percentage of prisoners who were sexually abused within the preceding year was 15.7% at Estelle.[10] The BJS surveyed inmates in hundreds of state and federal prisons and county jails. Nationwide, the rate of inmates reporting sexual victimization within a prior 12-month period was 4.5 percent. The Estelle rate was the highest in the U.S.[11]

Two correctional officers secretly allowed three inmates to fight each other on April 29, 2015 and attempted to cover up the act. They later confessed and were given prison sentences.[12]

Operations

The Estelle Unit is a part of a large compound, sharing space with the Ellis Unit, which is 3 miles (4.8 km) away from Estelle. The area housing the Ellis and Estelle units is wooded.[5]

The Estelle High Security Unit is a self-contained facility north of the main Estelle prison facility.[5] The high security unit was the first of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice's "super seg" units, which have many administrative segregation cells. The security unit houses many of the most violent male prisoners in the State of Texas. The security unit also houses prisoners who purposefully cause problems in order to escape from the general population for fear of victimization.[6]

Notable inmates

Current:

More information Inmate name, Register number ...
Inmate name Register number Status Details
David Ray Conley III 04138107 / 02370867 Serving a life sentence without parole. Perpetrator of the 2015 Harris County shooting in which he murdered his ex-girlfriend, Valerie Jackson, and 7 other members of her family.[13][14][15][16]
Bradley Chase Cadenhead 02449471 Serving an 80 year sentence. Sentenced for distributing child pornography.[17]
Bernie Tiede 05931666 / 00864378 Scheduled for release in 2098. Eligible for parole in 2029.[18] Murdered Marjorie "Marge" Nugent in 1999.[19][20]
Miguel Alvarez-Flores 16731684 / 02337494 Scheduled for release in 2057. Eligible for parole in 2037. One of 2 perpetrators of the 2017 Murder of Genesis Cornejo-Alvarado, and the kidnapping of other girls, and the case is remembered for the unusual involvement of Satanism.[21][22][23][24]
Faryion Wardrip[25] Death plus three life sentences without the possibility of parole (1999)[26] Sexual assault and murder of five women.
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Former:

References

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