Corrections Victoria
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Corrections Victoria is the Australian government department established on July 1, 2003, responsible for Victoria's corrections system. Corrections Victoria manages approximately 50 Community Correctional Centres in Victoria and is also responsible for the management of the states public prisons as well as overseeing the contracts of privately operated prisons.
[edit] Prison management in Victoria
Corrections Victoria manages Victoria's 11 public prisons.
- Dame Phyllis Frost Centre (Women's)
- HM Melbourne Assessment Prison
- HM Prison Ararat
- HM Prison Barwon
- HM Prison Dhurringile
- HM Prison Langi Kal Kal
- HM Prison Loddon
- HM Prison Tarrengower (Women's)
- HM Prison Won Wron
- HM Marngoneet Correctional Centre
Private Prisons
- Fulham Correctional Centre, managed by ACM
- Port Phillip Correctional Centre, managed by GSL Custodial Services (formerly Group 4)
On October 29, 1987, prisoners detained in the high security Jika Jika unit of Pentridge Prison, were dissatisfied with inhumane conditions in the unit. They began to seal off doors to their cells using a tennis net and bedding. Windows were covered with paper so the prison officers were unable to identify prisoners causing damage.
The prisoners emptied water from the S bend of the toilets in their cells. They had planned to use a wet blanket to cover their heads whilst they attempted to breath the small amount of air in the sewage plumbing system whilst a fire was lit. Smoke rapidly filled the unit. Jika Jika was completely free of any fresh air whatsoever as it was a climate controlled division. In spite of the men's attempts to avoid the thick, toxic black smoke by breathing through the plumbing, prisoners Robert Wright, Jimmy Loughnan, Arthur Gallagher, David McGauley and Ricky Morris died in the fire. Minogue and three other prisoners survived. All four spent days on ventilators recovering in the prison hospital.
Attorney General and Minister for Corrections Jim Kennan immediately ordered the closure of the Jika Jika maximum security section of Pentridge Prison thereafter saying: "The level of deaths in Jika Jika has become unacceptable".
None of the surviving prisoners were charged with any offences. In the ensuing coronial inquest into the deaths in the fire Minogue gave evidence over three days. At the completion of the inquest the State Coroner found Corrections Victoria was, in his words, "moribund and corrupt".