Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site (2024)

ByMatthew Murray,BBC News

Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site (1)Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site (2)BBC

Management at HMP Parc in Bridgend should have been quicker to act after the first drug-related death, a former prison boss said.

Vanessa Frake is a former head of security and operations at Wormwood Scrubs Prison in London and said a major search for drugs should have been carried out at the prison in Bridgend.

Ten inmates have died at the privately run prison since 27 February, with at least four believed to be drug-related, while one prison staff member has been arrested in connection with drug dealing there.

Officials at HMP Parc, run by the security firm G4S, said they were "actively tackling the multiple ways that drugs enter the prison" and strengthening security measures.

Ms Frake, has 27 years experience in the prison service, and said: "To have a total of 10 deaths in just over three months is almost unheard of.

“I’d think if I’d lost one prisoner through drugs, I’d do something about it and not wait for it to be two, three and four deaths.

"I know the prisons and probation ombudsman asked prisoners to throw away any spice they might have, and I think that says it all.

“It sounds like certain procedures like searching of cells, searching of prisoners, searching of staff went by the by.”

Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site (3)Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site (4)Vanessa Frake

The director of Parc prison, Heather Whitehead, who had been in charge since August 2023, left with immediate effect on Tuesday.

Will Styles, who has been with G4S for a year running HMP Five Wells in Northamptonshire, has been appointed as the new director.

Ms Frake added: “There are several things that can be done to stop drugs getting into the jail."

She said one of these would be to get a dog search team to "sweep the prison for drugs".

Commenting on what else she would do, she added: “Check every single prisoner, every single cell, every single area. Then I’d look at the prison’s search policy and see if it’s robust enough.

“A robust search policy is paramount, If there’s active robust searches, it will act as a deterrent.

“No-one wants to work in a drug-fuelled jail.“

The 10 deaths in Parc prison so far this year is the highest total of any prison in Wales on record.

It is currently nearly double the rate of 6.4 deaths per 1,000, compared to the UK prison average (year to March 2024) of 3.3 deaths per 1,000.

The previous highest total for a year was also at Parc - nine in 2016.

At least four of the deaths are believed to be drug-related, while one prison staff member has been arrested in connection with drug dealing there.

South Wales Police said in March that a nitazene - a synthetic opioid drug - had been identified in connection with all four deaths.

The force said spice, another synthetic drug, had been identified in two of the four deaths.

Leo Deacon, 23, from Abertillery, Blaenau Gwent, served time at HMP Cardiff and HMP Parc in 2021 for assaulting a police officer.

Mr Deacon has undergone treatment for alcohol addiction and said he was offered drugs while he was on the induction wing at Parc prison.

“The staffing is completely different at Parc prison, there’s not as many staff as Cardiff prison and they don’t have the same equipment," he said.

"Staff in Cardiff are equipped like the police, they’d have pepper spray, baton, and handcuffs.

“They don’t have that in Parc, they just have a radio and they’re not trained up in the same way.

“When an incident happens, like prisoners fighting, it’s dealt with quickly in Cardiff, but at Parc it always seemed longer to get it under control.

“There’s a lot more inexperienced staff as well at Parc, they seemed young, some about the same age as me and I was only 20 at the time.”

Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site (5)Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site (6)bbc

Mr Deacon said his brother is also currently serving time as an inmate at Parc prison and has been in custody since March.

He said it is a worrying time for his family with 10 inmates dying while his brother has been there.

“They’ve appointed a new director from Five Wells Prison, which is also a failing jail and appointed him in another failing jail with Parc," he said.

"I’d love for the Ministry of Justice to take over the running of Parc with their staff.”

An independent monitoring board (IMB) report for Five Wells in Northamptonshire published last September found there were too many "inexperienced operational staff" and a "reluctance by wing staff to challenge prisoners".

The IMB also said that drugs were available in most house blocks at Five Wells Prison.

The first ever inspection of Five Wells prison took place in February this year just six months after Will Styles took over the running of the jail.

The chief inspector of prisons said in the report that the "director, was very experienced and had brought a much-needed sense of stability and assurance, as well as a renewed sense of direction, to the establishment".

Families of inmates at HMP Parc who died while in the prison protested outside the facility last month, saying they wanted answers from authorities following claims of drug misuse within the jail.

It is one of the UK's largest category B prisons, holding convicted male adult and young offenders, as well as convicted sex offenders or those awaiting trial for sex offences.

A HMP Parc spokesperson said a prison-wide lockdown search was carried out as soon as nitazenes were detected at the prison.

They also said prison staff are provided with suitable equipment and training, and both its training of prison custody officers and the number of staff supervising prisoners meets HM Prison and Probation Service requirements.

“We are actively tackling the multiple ways that drugs enter the prison from the wider community while continuously strengthening our security measures to protect prisoners and staff," they added.

"This includes random and intelligence-led searches of staff, visitors and prisoners.”

Wales

HM Prison Service

Prisons

Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site (2024)

FAQs

Parc Prison: Call for specialist drug search of Bridgend site? ›

Management at HMP Parc in Bridgend should have been quicker to act after the first drug-related death, a former prison boss said. Vanessa Frake is a former head of security and operations at Wormwood Scrubs Prison in London and said a major search for drugs should have been carried out at the prison in Bridgend.

What category is Bridgend prison? ›

HM Prison Parc (Welsh: Carchar Parc EF) is a Category B men's private prison and Young Offenders Institution in Bridgend, Mid Glamorgan, Wales.

How many prisoners are in HMP Parc? ›

Parc is a private prison near Bridgend run by G4S. It is one of the largest prisons in England and Wales, holding over 1,300 prisoners. It is primarily a category B prison, but also has a distinct unit for children and young adults.

What drugs are in Scottish prisons? ›

Slightly more than one in ten started using illegal drugs in prison. Benzodiazepines, opiates and cannabis were the most commonly used illicit drugs amongst Scottish prisoners. A small number of prisoners report injecting drugs (5%), mainly heroin, in prison.

When was mandatory drug testing introduced into British prisons? ›

MDT was first rolled out nationally across the Prison Service in 1996/97 as part of the prison strategy for reducing the supply of drugs in establishments.

What is the highest category prisoner? ›

All prisoners are given a category which sets out how the prison system will handle you. At the most serious end for male prisoners are Category A prisoners. These people are defined as being “Those whose escape would be highly dangerous to the public or national security.

What wings are in Parc Prison? ›

A wing and B wing have four units each with 75 single and double cells holding sentenced, standard- and basic-level young adults and adults. C and D wings are single units with 69 single and double cells each. C wing contains the resettlement unit and D wing contains the substance misuse support unit.

What is the most violent prisons? ›

1- ADX Florence

Located in Fremont County, Colorado, it operates under the Federal Bureau of Prisons, offering an unparalleled level of custody designed for the most dangerous and high-profile inmates. Constructed in 1994 and opened a year later, ADX Florence was born out of necessity.

What is the vulnerable prisoner unit? ›

Vulnerable Prisoner Units (VPUs)

This is a unit or a wing where some prisoners stay if the prison believes they are at risk from others. VPU is not the same as segregation.

Do prisons have condoms? ›

San Francisco has been distributing condoms to inmates in county jails for decades, but a new California law requires condoms to be made available to all state prisoners. California is the second state after Vermont to do so, even though sex between prisoners is unlawful here.

What diseases are caught in prisons? ›

At-risk diseases
  • HIV/AIDS. See also: Prison rape in the United States § Sexually transmitted infections. ...
  • Hepatitis C. While the majority of HCV infections occur outside of prison, the infection is still widespread within the prison system as a result of drug injection. ...
  • Tuberculosis. ...
  • COVID-19.

Do prisoners take medication? ›

MEDICATION. Prisoners are often not allowed to have possession of the medication they have been prescribed. When it is time for their medication, the prisoner has to go stand in line at the "pill window".

When did smoking stop in UK prisons? ›

31 October 2015 - Smoking prohibited in enclosed places in open prisons in England and Wales. 31 January 2016 - Smokefree closed prisons (indoors and out) start to be rolled out. All Welsh prisons go smokefree on this date. 31 January 2016 to May 2016 - Eight early adopter prisons in southwest England become smokefree.

When did they take cigarettes out of prisons? ›

Before the 2006 policy change, an estimated 60 to 80 percent of prison and jail inmates were smokers - far higher than the national average - alarming public health advocates who noted poor ventilation at facilities exposed nonsmokers to significant amounts of secondhand smoke.

What happened in 1968 was the first drug disqualification? ›

The first ever drugs disqualification in the Olympic Games happened in 1968 Mexico City Olympics when the Swedish pentathlete Hans-Gunnar Liljenwall was tested positive for excessive alcohol.

What are category B prisons in the UK? ›

Category B

These prisons are either local or training prisons. Local prisons house prisoners that are taken directly from court in the local area (sentenced or on remand), and training prisons hold long-term and high-security prisoners.

What are Category C prisons? ›

This is where prison staff think you should have no chance of escaping. Category C. This is where prison staff think you will not escape, but that you cannot be trusted in an open prison. Category D. This is where prison staff think they can trust you to be in an open prison.

Is there a Category A prison in Wales? ›

1.11 Because there are no high security prisons in Wales, all Welsh category A prisoners are held in high security prisons in England. In 2022, there were 35 prisoners from Wales held as category A (Ministry of Justice, 2023d).

What is prison category J? ›

The “J” refers to the mentally ill classification when California used letters to label incarcerated people.

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