St. Clair Correctional Facility is an Alabama state men's prison located in Springville, St. Clair County, Alabama. The prison was originally built in 1983,[1] and has an operating capacity of 1,514 inmates.[2] The current warden is Guy Noe.[1]
History
The facility was built in 1983. In April 1985 it was site of a major riot. Five employees were beaten and 22 others including the warden and his deputy were held hostage by inmates armed with guns. The prisoners complained of "barbaric conditions".[3][4]
The strike in April explained its motives as an "effort to improve education programs and end overcrowding, harsh sentencing," and to end the 'free labor system'.[5]
Within a year period ending September 2014, six inmates had been killed in the facility.[6] The Alabama non-profit Equal Justice Initiative had already called for a change in leadership three months prior, after inmate Jodey Waldrop was killed in the early morning hours of June 3,[7] for what they described as a pattern of serious neglect and violence, including an incident when the then-warden punched a handcuffed prisoner. As of June 2014, the prison was at 130 percent capacity.[8]
2016
In March 2016 a correctional officer was wounded by a knife trying to break up a fight.[9] On May 13, 2016, another inmate was found dead of unknown causes.[10]
In June 2016 the Equal Justice Initiative filed a motion in federal court arguing that "severe overcrowding, understaffing and dangerous conditions violate the prisoners' constitutional rights," and that the prison's severe understaffing poses a safety risk to guards and correctional officers. The facility runs at 59.5% of full staffing levels, giving it an inmate-to-staff ratio among the highest in U.S. prisons.[11] In the fiscal year ending in September 2016, there were 249 reported assaults at St. Clair.[1]
Beyond
Press reports indicate that the facility is in a lawless condition. One expert cited "a total breakdown of the necessary basic structures that are required to operate a prison safely."[12][when?]